+++ /dev/null
-C-KERMIT CHANGE LOG (Changes since 8.0.200 of 12 Dec 2001)
-
-Chronological order: Go to the bottom to find the newest edits.
-
----8.0.200---
-
-Known bugs (+ = fixed after release):
-
- + 1. tilde_expand() can call getcwd() with NULL arg.
- + 2. getexedir() called too early (fatal in combination with (1)).
- + 3. Kermit "get blah" where blah is a symlink; server refuses to send it.
- Should not do this if GET not recursive.
- ? 4. Dave Sneddon's report about VMS fore/background confusion.
- + 5. FTP GET path/file doesn't work - path not stripped - but MGET works.
- + 6. IRIX 5.3 compilation problems (have patches from Marcus Herbert)
- X 7. Filename completion bug (see below) (deferred).
- + 8. QNX6 herald and other problems.
-
--------------
-
-Merged Jeff's changes, 20 Dec 2001:
-
- . Changed all occurrences of "ttnproto == NP_TELNET" to "IS_TELNET()" to
- account for the difference between SSH and Telnet. ckuscr.c,
- ckuus[3457].c, ckcnet.h, ckcfns.c, ckudia.c, ckutio.c, ckucon.c, ckucns.c.
-
- . Moved SSH pty failure warnings. ckuusr.c.
-
- . Security adjustments to FTP module, plus fix an error message. ckcftp.c.
-
- . Adjustment of some security-related #ifdefs. ckcdeb.h, ckuus2.c, ckctel.c.
-
- . Guard against calling getpwnam() with a NULL arg in tilde_expand() ckufio.c.
-
- . Moved getexedir() call to later, where it's safe. ckcmai.c.
-
-Added SSH ADD and many SSH SET commands from Jeff's spec. Fixed SHOW SSH
-to not dump core if variables weren't set. ckcker.h, ckuus[r3].c, 20 Dec 2001.
-
-C-Kermit in server mode, client says "get foo" where foo is a symlink.
-Server says "no files meet selection criteria" instead of sending the file.
-It should only refuse to follow symlinks if it's a recursive get. Fixed
-in sgetinit(): ckcpro.w, 21 Dec 2001.
-
-More work on SSH and SET/SHOW SSH commands. ckuus[r3].c, 21 Dec 2001.
-
-Undid Jeff's replacement of the SSH pseudoterminal allocation failure
-message, because now it comes out any time an SSH command has to be
-reparsed (in the non-SSHBUILTIN case). ckuusr.c, 21 Dec 2001.
-
-More SSH and SET SSH command work back & forth with Jeff, plus Jeff added
-SET HOST /NET:SSH. ckcmai.c, ckuus[r37].c, ckcdeb.h, ckuusr.h, 22 Dec 2001.
-
-Added SSH OPEN switches. ckuusr.c, 22 Dec 2001.
-
-Added SSH CLEAR, HELP SSH, and HELP SET SSH. ckuus[r2].c, 23 Dec 2001.
-
-From Jeff:
- . SET TCP commands now apply to SSH
- . SSH V2 REKEY and FORWRD-{LOCAL,REMOTE}-PORT commands now implemented
- . Missing DLLs automatically disable appropriate authentication mechanisms.
-ckuusr.c ckcnet.c ckuus3.c ckcmai.c ckcnet.h ckuus4.c, 26 Dec 2001.
-
-From Jeff:
- . Remove SET SSH KEEPALIVES.
- . Add help text for SSH AGENT { ADD, DELETE, LIST }.
-ckuus[23].c, 28 Dec 2001.
-
-Added parsing for SSH AGENT { ADD, DELETE, LIST }. ckuusr.c, 28 Dec 2001.
-
-From Jeff:
- . Fixed a crash that can happen when making an SSH connection.
- . Filled in SSH AGENT actions.
- . Changed default for strict host key check (to ASK) and help text.
- . uploaded new binaries include ~kermit/os2test/beta/ssh-agent.exe
- . Read man ssh-agent on ftp.kermit.columbia.edu for details on what it does.
-ckuus[r23].c, 28 Dec 2001.
-
-"ftp get path/filename" didn't work; the FTP client did not strip the path
-from the local copy of the filename when doing a GET, even though it did
-for MGET. Diagnosis: in doftpget(), the "if (!getone && !skipthis)" statement
-lacked an "else" part for the getone case. ckcftp.c, 28 Dec 2001.
-
-A while back Jeff reported that in FTP MGET, if you cancel a file with 'x',
-all the rest of the files arrive truncated to 0 bytes. I tried this on both
-Unix and Windows and couldn't reproduce it.
-
-In the last-minute flurry to release C-Kermit 8.0, I thought I noticed the FTP
-client failing to update the fullscreen file-transfer display. But it seems
-to work right, at least in Unix. When downloading a big file with FTP, all
-the display fields are updated as expected. But smaller files might go by too
-fast for the display to do anything. HOWEVER, in K95 the file transfer
-display does not update itself until the end of the file, even if the file
-takes a long time to transfer. This happens in both the Console and GUI
-versions. A thread thing? (Jeff says no.) Yet the same display works fine
-on Telnet connections.
-
-In IRIX 5.3, the select()-based CONNECT module had to include <sys/time.h>
-or else it blew up with "struct timeval" unknown. Since there already was
-a SYSTIMEH CFLAG, I added the #include within #ifdef SYSTIMEH..#endif and
-rebuilt with KFLAGS=-DSYSTIMEH, only to discover that the irix5* targets
-didn't bother to propogate KFLAGS. Fixed in ckucns.c, makefile, 30 Dec 2001.
-
-Increased IRIX5x Olimit from 2400 to 3000 because of ckuus[34].c. Added
--ansi, since (Marcus Herbert reported) we were not actually getting ANSI-C
-compilation even though CK_ANSIC was defined. But now that we are, we get
-warnings in <netinet/tcp.h>, which is included by ckcnet.h:
-
- bit-field 'th_off' type required to be int, unsigned int, or signed int.
- (3.5.2.1(30))
- u_char th_off:4,
- ------ ^
-Tough. makefile, 30 Dec 2001.
-
-But adding -ansi to the IRIX 5x targets also make compilation bomb whenever we
-referenced fdopen() or popen(), which evidently don't have prototypes in any
-of the header files. Luckily we already have CFLAGS for this occasion too:
-DCLFDOPEN and DCLPOPEN. Added these to the irix51 target. Also had to copy
-the fdopen()-popen() prototype section to ckuusx.c, which has a new reference
-to fdopen() in a workaround for the curses console buffering bug. makefile,
-ckuusx.c, 30 Dec 2001.
-
-The QNX6 version did not receive a proper herald (it announced itself as
-"unknown version". Reshuffled #ifdefs in ckuver.h, added display of QNX6
-and NEUTRINO symbols to ckuus5.c, 30 Dec 2001.
-
-Lucas Hart sent in a patch for the VMS problem. Apparently it was even worse
-than Dave Sneddon had reported: 8.0 couldn't run at all under Batch. ckvtio.c,
-31 Dec 2001.
-
-A major obstacle to the usability of the FTP client is that certain commands
-don't behave as FTP users expect: CD, DIR, DELETE, MKDIR, etc, which are local
-rather remote, and there are no LCD (etc), USER, or ACCOUNT commands. We
-could fix this by adding an FTP command-language personality, but file
-management commands can also be remote or local on connections to Kermit
-servers too. So:
-
-SET LOCUS { LOCAL, REMOTE, AUTO }
- Sets the locus for unprefixed file management commands.
- When LOCAL, a REMOTE (or R) prefix is required for
- to send file management commands to a remote server (e.g. RCD, RDIR).
- When REMOTE, an L prefix is required to issue local file management
- commands (e.g. LCD, LDIR). The word LOCAL can't be used as a prefix
- since it is used for declaring local variables.
-
-This applies to all types of connections, and thus is orthogonal to SET
-GET-PUT-REMOTE, which selects between Kermit and FTP for remote file-transfer
-and management commands.
-
-The default LOCUS is AUTO, which means we switch to REMOTE whenever an FTP
-connection is made, and to LOCAL whenever a non-FTP connection is made,
-and switch back accordingly whenever a connnection is closed.
-
-Implementation (31 Dec 2001):
- . None of this is compiled if LOCUS is not defined.
- . Added XYLOCUS (SET LOCUS) and LOCUS definitions: ckuusr.h.
- . Override by defining NOLOCUS (which inhibits definition of LOCUS).
- . Added LOCUS to SET keyword table: ckuusr.c.
- . Added locus & autolocus variables: ckuusr.c.
- . Added SET LOCUS parsing and variable setting: ckuus3.c.
- . Added display of LOCUS setting to SHOW COMMAND: ckuus5.c.
- . Added automatic locus setting to setlin(): ckuus7.c.
- . Added automatic locus setting to ftpopen() and ftpclose(): ckcftp.c.
-
-How to catch all the places where a Kermit connection is closed? Turns out
-we've done this before, when we added the connection log. So I made
-dologend() take care of locus switching. But dologend() was not compiled in
-if certain symbols were defined, such as NOLOCAL, or not defined, such as
-CKLOGDIAL. So I (a) rearranged the #ifdefs so that even if these would
-otherwise have obliviated dologend(), now they leave a piece of it for
-locus-setting; (b) moved the prototype out of #ifdefs; and (c) took all calls
-to it out of #ifdefs. ckcker.h, ckcfn2.c, ckcmai.c, ckucns.c, ckucon.c,
-ckuus[r347x].c, 31 Dec 2001.
-
-Added locus checking to the following commands: DIRECTORY, CD/CWD, CDUP,
-DELETE, PWD, MKDIR, RMDIR, RENAME. ckuusr.c, 31 Dec 2001.
-
-Added LDIRECTORY, LCD/LCWD, LCDUP, LDELETE, LPWD, LMKDIR, LRMDIR,
-LRENAME. ckuusr.[ch], 31 Dec 2001.
-
-Added USER and ACCOUNT commands, which are the same as FTP USER and FTP
-ACCOUNT. ckuusr.[ch], ckcftp.c, 31 Dec 2001.
-
-Since automatic locus switching could be a big surprise for most people, I
-printed message any time it changed. ckcftp.c, ckuus[37].c, 31 Dec 2001.
-
-Added help text for the new L commands and filled in missing HELP text for
-SET GET-PUT-REMOTE, CDUP, MKDIR, and RMDIR. ckuus2.c, 31 Dec 2001.
-
-Changed help text of CD, DIR, etc, for LOCUS. Changed the help text for
-RCD, RPWD, RDEL, RDIR, etc, to mention that they also work with FTP servers.
-Updated HELP REMOTE for this too. ckuus2.c, 31 Dec 2001.
-
-Made sure code builds with NOLOCAL, NOLOGDIAL, and NOLOCUS (it does).
-
-The IKSD command, when given with a /USER: switch, sends the user ID to the
-IKSD. But the SET HOST /USER: command does not, when making a connection to a
-Kermit service. This makes it impossible to script IKSD interactions using
-only client commands. Furthermore, even if you include a /PASSWORD switch
-with the IKSD command, it does not send the password. I added code near the
-bottom of setlin() to do this. If we have a connection to a Kermit service
-and a /USER: switch was given, then we attempt a REMOTE LOGIN. If a
-/PASSWORD: switch was not given then if the username is "ftp" or "anonymous",
-we automatically supply a password of user@host; otherwise we prompt for a
-password. If a /USER: switch was not given, it acts like before. It all
-works, but it might not be the best way (or place) to do it. setlin():
-ckuus7.c, 31 Dec 2001.
-
- NOTE: The above change doesn't help with IKSD /USER:anonymous,
- the server prompts for password anyway, not sure why.
-
- NOTE 2: What about secure authentication? We have to test to see
- if user was already authenticated before sending the login packet.
-
-Added /opt/kermit and /opt/kermit/doc to info_dir[] list (for Solaris).
-ckuus5.c, 31 Dec 2001.
-
-From Jeff: new Help text for SET TERM FONT (K95 GUI). ckuus2.c, 1 Jan 2002.
-
-More work on help text for file management commands -- e.g. we can't lump
-the L-commands together with the unprefixed ones; they need separate entries.
-Also: added missing HELP REMOTE PWD, improved the default case (in which
-help text had been omitted for a valid command). ckuus2.c, 1 Jan 2002.
-
-It seems VMS C-Kermit was pretty much ignoring the -B (force background) and
--z (force foreground) command-line options. Fixed in congm(): ckvtio.c,
-1 Jan 2002.
-
-Tested the SET LOCUS business with VMS C-Kermit, which does not have a
-built-in FTP client. Of course in this case there is no automatic locus
-switching, but SET LOCUS REMOTE works nicely on IKSD connections.
-
-From Jeff:
- . #ifdef adjustments for LOCUS changes.
- . SSH KEY CREATE /TYPE:SRP.
- . Fix \v(serial) to not be 8N2 by default if speed is 0.
- . Don't let doexit() run if sysinit() hasn't been called first.
-ckuus[r247x].c, 2 Jan 2002.
-
-Made SET BACKGROUND { ON, OFF } do exactly the same as -B and -z options.
-ckuus3.c, 2 Jan 2002.
-
-Updated user-visible copyright dates to 2002 (but still need to do all the
-source-module comments). ckcmai.c, ckuus[25].c, 2 Jan 2002.
-
-Rearranged #include <sys/time.h> in ckucns.c that was done for IRIX 5.3,
-to avoid conflicts in SV/68 R3v6. 3 Jan 2002.
-
-From Dave Sneddon: Code changes in VMS sysinit() and congm() to work around
-problems in batch, SPAWN'd, etc, and change CTTNAM from TT: to SYS$INPUT:.
-ckcdeb.h, ckvtio.c, 3 Jan 2002.
-
-From Jeff:
- . Fixed typo in definition of CTTNAM for VMS. ckcdeb.h
- . Moved macro definitions for SSHBUILTIN from ckuus3.c to ckuusr.h
- so they can be referenced in ckuus7.c
- . Added SSH functionality to SET HOST:
- SET HOST /NET:SSH /CONNECT hostname [port] /switches
- . Fixed SET NET TYPE so it won't reject SSH if SSH is installed.
- . Changes to allow IKSD to continue functioning. Somehow this minor change
- to ckcmai.c got lost in one of the back and forth exchanges.
- . HELP TEXT for UCS2 kverb
- . Fix a problem in K95 where multiple threads could be attempting to
- send a telnet negotiation simultaneously.
-ckcmai.c ckcdeb.h ckuus2.c ckuus3.c ckuusr.c ckuusr.h ckuus7.c ckctel.c
-ck_crp.c ckuat2.h ckuath.c, 4 Jan 2002.
-
-From Jeff:
-
- Peter Runestig complaining that the Telnet Forward X code was corrupting
- data. This resulted in a very thorough examination of the telnet module
- code and a discovery of some rather significant problems. The root of the
- problems is the lack of thread safety. To correct this problem the
- following was done.
-
- All code (regardless of module) which outputs telnet commands is placed
- into a mutex region to ensure that competing output threads do not result
- in interleaving their output. This could happen for instance when the
- forward-x thread is forwarding data and the user changes the window size
- or sends an AYT or BREAK. Next the buffer used for input and output
- processing were identical. This means that output data could be treated
- as input or vice versa. Ugh....
-
- I also spent some more time cleaning up setlin(). Mostly reorganizing the
- code into single if (...) blocks so that breaking it up will be easier.
-
-ckctel.c ckuus7.c, 4 Jan 2002.
-
-Updated internal copyright notices. All modules, 5 Jan 2002.
-
-From Jeff:
- More of same, plus new makefile target and changes from Spike Gronim
- for freebsd44+srp+openssl.
-ckcdeb.h ckcnet.c ckctel.c ckuus7.c ck_ssl.c makefile, 5 Jan 2002.
-
-Some minor updates and fixes to SSH and SET SSH help text.
-ckuus2.c, 6 Jan 2002.
-
-Added SET RGB-COLORS for GUI. ckuusr.[ch], ckuus3.c, 6 Jan 2002.
-
-From Jeff: More Telnet changes, Debug semaphores for K95, etc: ckcdeb.h,
-ckuusr.h, ckuus[r35x].c, ckctel.[ch], ckuath.c, 7 Jan 2002.
-
-Added --xpos:n --ypos:n, SET GUI WINDOW POSITION x y, and changed SET
-RGB-COLORS to SET GUI RGBCOLOR. Action needs to be filled in (in setguiwin()
-in ckuus3.c), and gui_xpos and gui_ypos need to be defined in cko???.c.
-ckuusr.h, ckuus[r3y].c, 7 Jan 2002.
-
-Added --fontname:name --fontsize:name (and facename as synonym for fontname).
-ckuusr.h, ckuus[7y].c, 7 Jan 2002.
-
-Moved GUI (not OS/2) SET TERM FONT code in ckuus7.c to its own routine,
-setguifont(), in ckuus3.c, and made GUI SET TERM FONT call this routine,
-and also made SET GUI FONT call the same routine. ckuus[37].c, 7 Jan 2002.
-
-Added --termtype:, --height:, --width:, --user:. Also added symbols for
---telnet:, --ssh:, --ftp:, --[remote-]charset, and --password:, but didn't
-fill them in. --password: is probably not a good idea (but we allow it for
-FTP); the others involve a lot of code-shuffling and reconciliation, which
-I'll try to do when I get a chance (especially the connection ones, which
-can be done as part of the setlin() restructuring). ckuusr.h, ckuusy.c,
-8 Jan 2002.
-
-Also I tried commenting out the #ifndef KUI..#endif's around SET TERMINAL
-CHARACTER-SET (easier said than done because a crucial #endif was mislabeled).
-Let's see if it compiles & works... ckuus7.c, 8 Jan 2002
-
-Added FTP [ OPEN ] /NOINIT, meaning don't send REST, STRU, and MODE commands
-upon making an FTP connection. This allows connection to servers that close
-the connection (or worse) when given these commands (e.g. Linux 2.4 TUX 2.0
-FTP server). ckcftp.c, 8 Jan 2002.
-
-Looked at adding caller ID support for the ANSWER command:
-
- . SET ANSWER CALLER-ID { ON, OFF }
- . SET ANSWER RINGS <number>
- . \v(callid_xxx) xxx = { date, time, name, nmbr, mesg }
- . CKD_CID modem capability
- . Set CKD_CID for modems that have it.
- . A quick survey shows:
- - USR V.90: No (but Jeff says some USRs have it).
- - V.250: No
- - Lucent Venus: No
- - USR: #CID=1 (the ones that have it -- X2?)
- - Diamond Supra: #CID=1
- - Rockwell 56K: #CID=1
- - PCTEL: #CID=1
- - Zoltrix: +VCID=1
- - Conexant: +VCID=1
- . Since there are different commands to enable caller ID reporting,
- we need a new field in struct MDMINF.
- . SHOW MODEM and SHOW DIAL would need updating.
- . etc etc...
-
-This is all way too much for now so I just did the setting of the \v(callid_*)
-variables. These are reset at the beginning of an ANSWER command, and then
-set by the ANSWER command if they come in; thus they persist from the time
-they are collected until another ANSWER command is given. To take advantage
-of autoanswer, the user has to enable it in the modem (all the modems I found
-that support it have it disabled by default), and also has to set the number
-of rings to at least 2. This can be done with (depending on the modem):
-
- set modem command autoanswer on ATS0=2#CID=1\{13}
- set modem command autoanswer on ATS0=2+VCID=1\{13}
-
-and undone with:
-
- set modem command autoanswer on ATS0=1#CID=0\{13}
- set modem command autoanswer on ATS0=1+VCID=0\{13}
-
-The variables can be accessed only after the call is answered. Therefore the
-only way to refuse a call is to answer it, inspect the variables, and then
-hang it up if desired. Future Kermit releases can do this more nicely (as
-sketched out above.) Also while I was in the dialing code, I added result
-code VCON (= VOICE), used by several of the newer modems. These changes are
-untested. The SET ANSWER command is written but commented out. ckuusr.h,
-ckcker.h, ckuus[r3].c, ckudia.c, 8 Jan 2002.
-
-From Jeff: fixes to --termtype:, --height:, --width:, --user:, and filling in
-of --rcharset:, which required extracting code from settrm() into a separate
-parse-method-independent remote character-set setting routine. ckuus[7y].c,
-8 Jan 2002.
-
-From Jeff: More work on TERMINAL CHARACTER-SET code reorganization, and
-reinstatement of SET TERMINAL CHARACTER-SET in K95G. Also, fix char/CHAR
-warnings in Telnet module. ckuus7.c, ckctel.c, 9 Jan 2002.
-
-Made SET TERM CHARACTER-SET visible for all builds, including K95G, and filled
-in HELP text for it. ckuus[27].c, 9 Jan 2002.
-
-Added help text for new extended options. ckuusy.c, 9 Jan 2002.
-
-Commented out the return(-2) statement at the end of xgnbyte() to make the
-"Statement not reached" errors go away, after checking to make sure that there
-was no path that could fall through to the end. I'm 99.99% sure there isn't,
-but that doesn't mean that some compilers might not still complain. ckcfns.c,
-9 Jan 2002.
-
-From Jeff: fix typo in the K95 extended-option help text; add more
-semaphores to network i/o. ckuusy.c, ckcnet.c, 10 Jan 2002.
-
-Undid ansiisms in set{lcl,rem}charset() declarations. ckuus7.c, 10 Jan 2002.
-
-Removed a duplicated clause from the install target. makefile, 10 Jan 2002.
-
-From Jeff: more semaphores. ckcnet.c, 11 Jan 2002.
-
-Moved references to tmpusrid and tmpstring out of NOSPL #ifdefs -- they can
-be used with NOSPL. setlin(): ckuus7.c, 13 Jan 2002.
-
-Made a dummy dologend() routine outside of #ifndef NOICP, so we don't have
-to enclose every reference to dologend in #ifdefs. (I had added a bunch of
-calls to dologend() throughout the code to handle automatic LOCUS switching.)
-ckuus3.c, 13 Jan 2002.
-
-Moved "extern int nettype" outside of NOICP #ifdefs in ckuus4.c for NOICP
-builds. 13 Jan 2002.
-
-Moved a misplaced #ifdef in the VERSION command. ckuusr.c, 13 Jan 2002.
-
-Did 81 different feature-selection builds on Linux (RH 7.0), all OK after the
-changes listed above for today. 13 Jan 2002.
-
-Added prototypes for set{rem,lcl}charset(). ckcxla.h, 13 Jan 2002.
-
-Added ckcxla.h to dependencies for ckuusy.c. ckvker.com, 13 Jan 2002.
-
-Made a correction to the HELP SET LOCUS text and supplied a missing comma
-for HELP REMOTE. ckuus2.c, 13 Jan 2002.
-
-Built OK on HP-UX 11.11 (K&R and ANSI), Solaris 8 (cc), Solaris 2.5.1 (gcc),
-SunOS 4.1.3 (cc and gcc), VMS 7.1 (DEC C, net and nonet), Unixware 7.1.1,
-Tru64 4.0G, HP-UX 10.20 (K&R), AIX 4.3.3, FreeBSD 2.2.8, Slackware 8.0, IRIX
-6.5.13f, IRIX 5.3 (??? Can't tell -- the computer ran out of swap space -- but
-it was OK a few days ago), VMS 5.5-2 (VAX C, UCX + nonet)... HP-UX 9.05, ...
-
-Some corrections to comments in HP targets from PeterE. makefile, 14 Jan 2002.
-
-Corrections to prototypes for set{rem,lcl}charset() (VOID, not void) from Jeff.
-ckcxla.h, 14 Jan 2002.
-
-Builds, cont'd... SINIX 5.42, Red Hat Linux 5.2 on i386, SuSE 7.0 on S/390,
-Red Hat 7.1 on IA64, QNX 4.25, HP-UX 5.21/WinTCP, ...,
-
-Dell Coleman <dell@aleph.tum.com> noticed that in AIX, the COPY command always
-says "Source and destination are the same file" when the destination file
-doesn't exist. This is because in AIX, realpath() fails with ENOENT (errno
-2). The zfnqfp() code already accounts for this, but evidently not well
-enough. So I did what I should have done long ago. zfnqfp() was originally
-accomplished with do-it-yourself code. Later I added support for realpath(),
-and partitioned the routine into mutually exclusive compile-time sections:
-#ifdef CKREALPATH realpath()... #else do-it-yourself... #endif. But if
-realpath() failed, there was no recourse to the do-it-yourself code. Today I
-replaced the #else with the #endif, so the do-it-yourself part is always
-included and is executed if the realpath() call fails. Built and tested on
-AIX 4.3.3 and Solaris 2.5.1, as well as on Linux with and without the
-realpath() code included. zfnqfp(): ckufio.c, 16 Jan 2002.
-
-Separated K95 and C-Kermit test version numbers, so C-Kermit can be RC.02
-while K95 is Beta.01. ckcmai.c, 16 Jan 2002.
-
-Inhibited 0-length writes by conol() and conoll(), since they cause big
-trouble with the AIX 4.3.3 pty driver, e.g. when you have an SSH connection
-into AIX and run C-Kermit there. ckutio.c, 16 Jan 2002.
-
-Suppressed "Switching LOCUS..." messages from FTP client when it was invoked
-from the command line. ckcfns.c, 17 Jan 2002.
-
-Dave Sneddon noticed that FOPEN /APPEND gets "?Write access denied" in VMS
-if the file exists. This is apparently because VMS zchko() does the wrong
-thing. Commenting out the call zchko() in the VMS case gets past this but
-then the appended part of the file has different attributes than the orignal
-part, e.g.:
-
- abc <- original line (horizontal, normal)
- d <- appended line (vertical)
- e
- f
-
-VMS fopen() takes an optional 4th argument: a series of RMS keyword=value
-pairs. Kermit doesn't give any. Experimentation shows that appending to
-a Stream_LF works fine. That'll be a restriction for now, until somebody
-sends in code to get the RMS attributes of the original file and feed them
-to fopen(). Also need code to fix VMS zhcko() to say whether it's OK to
-append to a file. ckuus7.c, 17 Jan 2002.
-
-Somebody suggested I could get a working Kermit for Neutrino 2+ by doing the
-QNX6 build on Neutrino itself. I verified that this can't be done -- at least
-not by me -- since Netutrino 2+ doesn't have a compiler, and we already know
-the version cross-built for it on QNX4 doesn't work. 17 Jan 2002.
-
-From Jeff: SET SSH GSSAPI KEY-EXCHANGE { ON, OFF } parsing, SHOW SSH.
-ckuus3.c, 18 Jan 2002.
-
-PeterE suggested that SET ESCAPE allow 8-bit escape characters because of the
-difficulty in entering Ctrl-\ on European keyboards and the hardship (e.g. to
-EMACS and VI users) of sacrificing another C0 control character. Like
-everything these days, this turns out to be rather a bigger deal than it would
-seem. The SET ESCAPE parser calls setcc(), which accepts control characters
-in various formats (literal, ^X notation, or numbers), and gives an error
-return if the value is not 0-31 or 127. This is changed easily enough to also
-allow numbers between 128 and 255. But who else calls setcc()? The commands
-for setting Kermit packet start and end characters. No big deal, this gives
-people a bit more flexibility in case they need it, but it won't be
-documented. setcc(): ckuus7.c, 18 Jan 2002.
-
-Since code to display the escape character is scattered all over the place,
-and some of it indexes into an array based on the character value (which would
-now dump core if the escape character was > 128), I put the code in one place,
-a new shoesc() routine in ckuusx.c (which needs to be outside #ifndef NOICP,
-since the CONNECT modules use it even in command-line only builds). Also
-discovered that this code was indexing into the nm[] array with tt_escape to
-get "enabled" or "disabled", which is no longer appropriate, so fixed this
-too. ckuusr.h, ckuus[5x].c, 18 Jan 2002.
-
-Made SHOW ESCAPE, SHOW TERM, and the various CONNECT modules call shoesc(),
-and updated HELP SET ESC. ckuus[25].c, ckucns.c, ck[cuvd9]con.c, 18 Jan 2002.
-
-After all that, it occurred to me that this is a really bad idea for K95,
-with all the confusion about Console code pages, OEM code pages, Windows
-code pages, and Unicode. But I tried "echo \161" at the K95 prompt and got
-the expected 8-bit character in both the Console version and the GUI, so
-maybe it's OK after all.
-
-Removed the automatic IKSD login code from setlin() since it complicates
-interactive anonymous login. ckuus7.c, 20 Jan 2002.
-
-An #ifdef clause from Matthew Clarke to avoid "redeclaration of free" error
-when building a curses version of C-Kermit for AIX 2.2.1 on RT PC. ckuusx.c,
-22 Jan 2002.
-
-Took care of one detail I omitted when adding the 8-bit escape character:
-not stripping the 8th bit before comparing the keyboard char with the escape
-char. ck[uv]con.c, ckucns.c, 24 Jan 2002.
-
-Started to go through Jeff's changes of the last week but he had run trim -t
-on them, which untabifies, so the diffs were huge. Retabifying Jeff's files
-only makes matters worse. So instead of comparing each old and new source
-file in EMACS windows with M-X Compare-Windows like I usually do (which can't
-be told to ignore whitespace), I had to work from the diff -c -b listings.
-In ascending order of size of diffs:
-
-ckcker.h: Add I_AM_SSHSUB definition.
-ckuusr.h: XXLINK and VN_PERSONAL, etc, definitions.
-ckuusy.c: Support for "I Am SSHSUB" invocation.
-ckuus5.c: Support for new K95 directory structure.
-ckcmai.c: Init endianness earlier (K95 TYPE was broken), "I Am SSHSUB" support.
-ckuus7.c: Security #ifdefs, SSH OPEN /PASSWORD, SSHSUB support
-ckcftp.c: <-- SAVE TIL LAST
-ckuus6.c: Add LINK command for K95 on NT.
-ckuus4.c: Support for new K95 directory structure; SSHSUB support
-ckuus3.c: Support for new K95 directory structure; some SSH changes
-ckuus2.c: Changes to SSH related help text, add HELP LINK text
-ckuusr.c: LINK command, SSH OPEN /PASSWORD: /SUBSYSTEM: switches,
- Pattern-management fixes.
-ckctel.c, ck_ssl.c, ckuath.c, ckcnet.c:
- Took Jeff's without looking.
-ckuusx.c, ckucns.c, ckucon.c, ckwart.c:
- My changes from weeks ago that were never picked up.
-
-Built OK on Solaris with gcc and on SunOS with (K&R non-ANSI) cc.
-31 Jan 2002.
-
-Meanwhile, Jeff had made various changes in response to Jaya Natarajan at IBM,
-whose basic complaint was that numerous failure conditions were not being
-detected if the fullscreen file-transfer display was active. Jeff found that
-this was because big blocks of code were skipped in that case and changed the
-code not to do that, which fixed the reported problems. But later Jaya said
-that "ftp mget file1 file2" acted like "ftp mget *", so it seemed that Jeff's
-fixes broke file selection. After taking Jeff's fixes for ckcftp.c, however,
-I still could not reproduce the problem. ckcftp.c, 31 Jan 2002. <-- Later,
-it turned out the problem was with IBM's custom FTP server.
-
-Fixed updates that I missed yesterday in ckcftp.c, ckuusr.c. Moved misplaced
-#ifdef in ckuusy.c breaking nonet builds. Added #ifdefs to sysinit() for
-nonet builds in ckutio.c. Ran through build-in-many-configurations script
-in Linux, all builds OK. 1 Feb 2002.
-
-Moved shoesc() definition outside of NOXFER to fix NOXFER builds.
-ckuusx.c, 1 Feb 2002.
-
-Added MYCUSTOM definition alongside KERMRC and changed KERMCL to be the
-same as CKMAXPATH, instead of some random hardwired number. ckuusr.h,
-1 Feb 2002.
-
-Changed ckcdeb.h to define DIRSEP and ISDIRSEP(), and put #ifndef
-[IS]DIRSEP..#endif around all [IS]DIRSEP definitions in ck[udso]fio.c, so we
-can finally put away the many repeated #ifdef chains when we get around to it.
-1 Feb 2002.
-
-Make VMS zkermini() return 1 on success, 0 on failure, rather than 0 always.
-ckvfio.c, 1 Feb 2002.
-
-Added code to doinit(), just before it goes to execute the init file. If the
-init file name we are about to open is empty or fails zchki(), substitute the
-customization filename. For now this code is in #ifdef USE_CUSTOM..#endif,
-which is not defined by default. It does the trick in Unix and VMS. Also
-included code from Jeff for K95, but this needs verification and testing.
-Also used DIRSEP and ISDIRSEP() throughout doinit() instead of the long #ifdef
-chains. ckuus5.c, 1 Feb 2002.
-
-Moved shoesc() prototype from ckuusr.h to ckcker.h so modules that need it
-don't have to include ckuusr.h just for this one thing (example: ckvcon.c).
-1 Feb 2002.
-
-Defined USE_CUSTOM by default, except if NOCUSTOM is defined. ckuusr.h,
-1 Feb 2002.
-
-Fixed kermit-sshsub code to really enter server mode, and to print
-"KERMIT READY TO SERVE..." so scripts can wait for it. Also bumped the
-C-Kermit test ID to RC.03 and the K95 one to Beta.02. ckcpro.w, ckcmai.c,
-2 Feb 2002.
-
-I was thinking about adding SET COMMAND BUFFER-SIZE to let people allocate
-as big a buffer as they wanted at runtime, mainly for defining huge macros.
-Moved the SCMD_blah definitions from ckuusr.h to ckuus3.c, since they aren't
-used anywhere else. But stopped there since the rest turns out to be a rather
-big deal. ckuusr.h, ckuus3.c, 2 Feb 2002.
-
-From Jeff, 3 Feb 2002:
- . Fix an out-of-order modem name in the SET MODEM TYPE table: ckudia.c.
- . Use SET LOGIN USER and PASSWORD if present. ckcftp.c.
-
-Cody Gould noticed that array declarations had become case sensitive, and
-upper case didn't work. Diagnosis: misplaced case conversion in xarray().
-Fixed in ckuus5.c, 4 Feb 2002.
-
-SHOW VAR dumps core on \v(sexpression) or \v(svalue) -- failure to check for
-NULL pointer. I wonder why this didn't happen before (answer: because I was
-doing it on SunOS; now I'm doing it on Solaris). ckuus4.c, 6 Feb 2002.
-
-I've had several requests for "show var name name name...". I added this to
-doshow(), such that SHOW VAR works exactly as it did before (if you don't give
-it an arg, it lists all variables; if you give it an arg, it appends "*" to it
-and lists all matching variables) but now you can also give more than one arg
-and it works the same way with each one as it did before if you gave it a
-single item (i.e., "*" is appended, so "show var os cmd" shows all variables
-whose names begin with "os" or "cmd". You can also freely use pattern
-notation, including anchors. Hmmm, no, actually it's different in that now
-each includes an implied * before AND after, so "show var version" shows all
-variables whose name contain "version" rather than all variables whose names
-start with it. ckuus5.c, 6 Feb 2002.
-
-Cody Gould reported that WRITE FILE blah blah \fexec(anything) ... got a
-spurious "File or Log not open" error. This turns out to be a rather
-pervasive problem -- whenever you use \fexec() it calls the parser recursively
-and this can run roughshod over global variables, such as our innocent little
-x, y, and s. The fix in this case was to put x and y on the stack. The same
-thing probably needs doing in about 10,000 other places. Too bad C isn't
-Algol. ckuusr.c, 6 Feb 2002.
-
-Minor fix to SHO VAR -- the "^" anchor wasn't working (e.g. "show var ^os").
-ckuus5.c, 6 Feb 2002.
-
-Fixes from Jeff for FTP file-transfer character-set translation in K95 and
-in WIKSD, plus updated K95 SSH help text. ckcftp.c, ckcfns.c, ckuus2.c,
-7 Feb 2002.
-
-Server has its date set in the past. Client says "remote dir". Server sends
-A packet containing old date. If client has FILE COLLISION UPDATE, it
-rejects the directory listing. Changed gattr() to only reject real files
-(introduced by F packet), not X-packet material like directory listings.
-ckcfn3.c, 7 Feb 2002.
-
-Up-down arrow keys for command recall. People have been asking for it for
-years but now it's actually important because of PDAs that don't have Ctrl
-keys. Would have been trivial except that we use getchar() rather than
-coninc() for reading from the keyboard in Unix so conchk() doesn't help. In
-fact there are lots of other places where conchk() is used this way and works
-only by accident. The only reason we never noticed a problem before is that
-characters don't usually arrive from the keyboard that fast. But when an
-arrow key sends "ESC [ A" all once, the stdin buffer gets some extra stuff in
-it, which getchar() will return next time, but which coninc()/conchk() will
-never see. So I added a new cmdconchk() routine which, if the keyboard is
-being read with getchar() rather than coninc(), looks at the stdin buffer.
-Unfortunately, however, there is no API for this, nor is there any standard
-way to access the stdin buffer directly. So first I did it for Solaris. Then
-to make it portable requires a survey of the headers for every platform. I
-found four major variations:
-
- stdin->_r:
- {Free,Open,Net}BSD, BSDI
- stdin->_cnt:
- SunOS, Solaris, HP-UX 5-6, AIX, VMS, SINIX, IRIX 5.3-6.5, DGUX
- 4.2BSD, 4.3BSD, OSF/1..Tru64, QNX4, Unixware 1.0-2.1.0
- stdin->__cnt:
- HP-UX 7-11, SCO: OSR5.0.6a, Unixware 2.1.3-7.x, OU8, UNIX 3.2v4.x
- Subtract read from end pointer (_IO_file_flags defined):
- Linux (tested on RH 5.2 thru 7.1)
-
-The Linux method is new and different to account for multibyte characters.
-All the others assume character == byte.
-
-For docs: ANSI only, 7-bit only; both application and cursor modes are
-accepted. Only up and down arrow are handled; left and right arrows cause
-a beep. ckucmd.c, 8 Feb 2002.
-
-Build-all: Discovered that changing CTTNAM from TT: to SYS$INPUT: in VMS
-(which was done on 3 Jan 2002 to work around problems starting Kermit in
-batch, spawn'd, etc) breaks Kermit on VMS 5.5/VAX (concb() fails with "lacks
-sufficient privilege"; if you enable all privs Kermit starts but then spews
-out a constant stream of BEL characters). If you put dftty back to "TT:",
-everything is fine -- I have no idea why, so I used #ifdef VMSV70 to decide,
-which is totally crude. Next I had to find where the boundary really is: VAX
-vs Alpha? VAX C vs DEC C? Or between VMS releases? Built on:
- . VMS 6.2 Alpha (DEC C) - OK with TT:
- . VMS 6.2 Alpha (DEC C) - OK with SYS$INPUT: <-- keep this one
- . VMS 7.1 VAX (DEC C)
-So the final condition is #ifdef VMSV60. ckvker.com, ckvtio.c, ckuus5.c.
-
-QNX 6 needed some attention too:
- . Whoever did the makefile target made the default port "/dev/ser1".
- . Arrow keys...
-But I gave up on getting arrow keys to work -- it should be just like *BSD,
-but for some reason gcc complains that struct FILE has no _r member, even
-though it does (getchar uses it).
-
-Checked stdio.h on Mac OS X and it looks like the *BSDs.
-
---- C-Kermit 8.0.201 ---
-
-Removed -g from solaris2xg+krb5+krb4+openssl+shadow makefile target -- it
-was producing a 15MB binary! makefile, 14 Feb 2002.
-
-Fixed a couple thinkos in "make install": $(DESTDIR) should not have been
-included in the tests for whether INFODIR or SRCDIR were desired. makefile,
-14 Feb 2002.
-
-(tarball refreshed 16 Feb 2002)
-
---- C-Kermit 8.0.201 ---
-
-From Jeff: Better seeding of \frandom(): ckcmai.c, ckuus4.c, 18 Feb 2002.
-
-From Jeff: Make arrow keys work in WIKSD, but now also unconditionally
-compile arrow-key code in all versions. ckucmd.c, 18 Feb 2002.
-
-From Jeff: ckuath.c, ck_ssl.c, ckcnet.c (didn't look). 18 Feb 2002.
-
-Added ORIENTATION command, that lists the various important directories, and
-\flongpathname() and \fshortpathname(), which do path format conversions in
-Windows, and are just synonynyms for \fpathname() elsewhere. The new functions
-need building and testing in Windows. ckuusr.h, ckuus[r24].c, 18 Feb 2002.
-
-Changed PWD for Windows only to show both short and long paths (but only if
-they are different; otherwise it behaves as before). ckuusr.c, 18 Feb 2002.
-
-Changed default Windows prompt to show long pathname. ckuus5.c, 18 Feb 2002.
-
-Updated INTRO command to mention FTP, HTTP, and SSH. ckuus2.c, 18 Feb 2002.
-
-From Jeff: fixes for typos in GetLongPathName() code: ckuus[r4].c, 22 Feb 2002.
-
-From Jeff: net/auth updates: ckcnet.c, ckuath.c, 22 Feb 2002.
-
-Added -DUSE_FILE__CNT to NCR MPRAS targets, George Gilmer: makefile,
-24 Feb 2002.
-
-From Jeff: Add support for GetLongPathName() in Win95 and NT: ckcdeb.h,
-ckuus[r4].c, 24 Feb 2002.
-
-From Jeff: More fixes for FTP SIGINT, plus fix [M]PUT /MOVE. ckcftp.c,
-24 Feb 2002.
-
-Fixed an unguarded reference to inserver, gtword(): ckucmd.c, 24 Feb 2002.
-
-Adapted RETRIEVE for use with FTP connections; this one was missed when
-adapting GET, REGET, MOVE, etc. ckuus6.c, ckcftp.c, 24 Feb 2002.
-
-Added special COPYRIGHT command text for the free version of WIKSD.
-ckcmai.c, ckuusr.c, 24 Feb 2002.
-
-C-Kermit, when in CONNECT mode and given the <Esc-Char>U sequence, would
-unconditionally close the connection if it was a network connection. This
-is bad when Telnetting to a modem server. I added to code to prevent this
-in the RFC2117 TELNET COMPORT case but I'm not sure how to exend this to the
-general case (or whether it would be a good idea). ckucns.c, 24 Feb 2002.
-
-During file transfer, chktimo() calls ttgspd() for every packet, which clearly
-doesn't make sense on network connections, especially since on Telnet COMPORT
-connections it results in a network speed query for every packet. Rearranged
-the code so this happens only on true serial-port connections. ckcfn2.c,
-24 Feb 2002.
-
-From Jeff: Fix reversed ANSI/non-ANSI function declarations clauses in
-ckcftp.c, 26 Feb 2002.
-
-Changed Unix CONNECT module to call kstart() only when it has a chance of
-doing anything (i.e. a Kermit packet has been partially detected, or the
-packet start character just came in), rather than unconditionally on every
-incoming character. ckucns.c, 8 Mar 2002.
-
-FTP PUT /SERVER-RENAME:, /RENAME-TO:, /MOVE-TO: were sticky. Patch: In
-ckcftp.c, near the top of doftpput(), add the lines marked with "+":
-
- makestr(&filefile,NULL); /* No filename list file yet. */
-+ makestr(&srv_renam,NULL); /* Clear /SERVER-RENAME: */
-+ makestr(&snd_rename,NULL); /* PUT /RENAME */
-+ makestr(&snd_move,NULL); /* PUT /MOVE */
- putpath[0] = NUL; /* Initialize for syncdir(). */
-
-ckcftp.c, 26 Mar 2002.
-
-\fday() and \fnday() were broken for dates prior to 17 Nov 1858. Fixed in
-fneval(): ckuus4.c, 28 Mar 2002.
-
-From Jeff:
- . New calling convenion for demoscrn(): ckucmd.c, ckuusx.c
- . Fix for host-initiated 80/132 col screen mode change. ckuus7.c.
- . New \v(desktop) variable: K95 user desktop directory, ckuusr.h, ckuus4.c
- . New \v(rfc2717_signature) var: Telnet Com Port, ckuusr.h, ckuus4.c
- . Uncomment "not-reached" return(-2) in xgnbyte(): ckcfns.c
- . New dates: ckcmai.c.
- . Telnet Com Port fixes: ckutio.c
- . SET PRINTER fixes for K95: ckuus3.c
- . Session limit adjustments: ckuus3.c
- . New directory layout for K95 (TAKE, ORIENT): ckuusr.c
- . Fixes for Telnet Com Port, recycling SSH connections: ckuusr.c
-
-From me, not picked up by Jeff previously:
- . kstart() speedup: ckucns.c.
-
-1 Apr 2002.
-
----K95 1.1.21---
-
-From Jeff, 4 Apr 2002:
- . More fixes for Telnet Com Port: ckuus4.c, ckudia.c, ckutio.c, ckcnet.c:
- . network connections will check for carrier detect if SET
- CARRIER-WATCH is ON. This could have a potential conflict if
- the option is negotiated and the carrier is off, but the site
- requires login.
- . modem hangup message generated since the dial module did not
- believe that network modems could be reset with a DTR drop.
- . Version number adjustments: 8.0.203, 1.1.99: ckcmai.c.
- . Security: ck_ssl.[ch], ckuath.c.
-
----C-Kermit 8.0.203---
-
-From Jeff, 6 Apr 2002:
- . Fix typo in HELP REMOTE HOST: ckuus2.c.
- . More Telnet Com Port fixes: ckctel.c, ckcnet.c, ckudia.c, ckutio.c
-
-From Jeff, 9 Apr 2002:
- . Fix autodownload problem: ckcfn[2s].c.
-
-Chiaki Ishikawa reported that in Linux (two different kinds), if you choose
-hardware parity, CONNECT, then escape back, the speed can change. I tracked
-this down to the following statement in ttvt():
-
- tttvt.c_cflag &= ~(IGNPAR); /* Don't discard incoming bytes */
-
-Somehow execution of this statement corrupted the speed words of the termios
-struct, which are entirely separate words that are nowhere near the c_cflag
-member. Anyway, the statement is wrong; it should be:
-
- tttvt.c_cflag |= IGNPAR; /* Don't discard incoming bytes */
-
-Fixing it cured the problem; don't ask me why. ckutio.c, 9 Apr 2002.
-
-From Jeff:
- fixes the problem reported by robi@hastdeer.com.au. The request to
- enter server mode was received while we were entering server mode.
- But the server was waiting for the response to REQ_STOP sent to the
- client. Therefore, we weren't quite in server mode yet and the
- request to enter server mode was rejected. A check for the sstate
- value solves the problem. ckctel.c, 10 Apr 2002.
-
-Chiaki Ishikawa (CI) discovered the real cause for the speed changing problem.
-I was setting the IGNPAR bit in the wrong flag word: it should have been
-c_iflag instead of c_oflag, silly me. Fixed in ttvt() and ttpkt(): ckutio.c.
-I also did a thorough census of all the termio[s] flags to ensure each was
-applied to the right flag word -- they were, IGNPAR in the HWPARITY case was
-the only mistake. CI also discovered that the speed words in the Linux
-termios struct are not used at all -- the speeds are encoded in an
-undocumented field of c_cflag, which explains the problem. 10 Apr 2002.
-
-Any use of \{nnn} character notation in a macro definition, loop, or other
-braced block caused an "unbalanced braces" parse error. The backslash in this
-case is not quoting the open brace; it's introducing a balanced braced
-quantity. Special-cased in getncm(): ckuus5.c, 12 Apr 2002.
-
-The semantics of "if defined \v(xxx)" were changed in 8.0 to avoid obnoxious
-error messages when xxx was not a built-in variable (see notes of 19 Nov
-2000), such that "if defined \v(xxx)" would always succeed if there were such
-a variable, even if it had no value. The behavior that is documented in the
-book (and also in ckermit70.html) and that we had in versions 6 and 7, was
-that IF DEFINED \v(xxx) would fail if \v(xxx) was defined but had an empty
-value OR if it was not defined, and would succeed only if it was defined and
-had a value. Fixed in boolexp(): ckuus6.c, 12 Apr 2002.
-
-What about \function()s? IF DEF \fblah() presently succeeds if the function
-exists; you don't even have to give arguments. I think this behavior is more
-useful than if I required valid arguments and then evaluated the function --
-you can do that anyway with 'if not eq "\fxxx(a,b)" "" ...' Of course this
-argument applies to "if def \v(xxx)" too, except that the current behavior is
-consistent with the 7.0 behavior, so there is no need for a change.
-
-Kent Martin discovered that if a macro contains a LOCAL statement for a
-variable whose name is the same as, or a unique left substring of, the macro's
-name, then undefining the local variable makes the macro disappear:
-
- define DateDiff {
- echo {DateDiff(\%1) executing...}
- }
- define Kent {
- do DateDiff {2}
- local date
- assign date {}
- do DateDiff {3} <-- This fails (A)
- }
- do DateDiff {1}
- do Kent
- do DateDiff {4} <-- So does this (B)
-
-The first part of the problem is that "assign date {}" called delmac with
-exact=0, so delmac evidently deleted first macro whose name started with
-"date" -- and since the only one was DateDiff, that's the one that was
-deleted. Fixing this (change "delmac(vnp,0)" to "delmac(vnp,1)" in dodef())
-got us past A. The second part was making the same fix to the delmac()
-call in popclvl(). ckuus[56].c, 13 Apr 2002.
-
-The INPUT command ignored the parity setting, thus SET PARITY EVEN,
-INPUT 10 "login:" didn't work. Fixed in doinput(): ckuus4.c. Also fixed a
-bogus #ifdef COMMENT section that messed up the block structure of the module
-and therefore EMACS's indenting. 18 Apr 2002.
-
-Added sco32v500net+ssl and Added sco32v505net+ssl targets, from Scott Rochford
-at Dell (not sure yet if they work). Makefile, 19 Apr 2002.
-
-From Jeff, 22 Apr 2002:
- . Added "darkgray" color and made "dgray" an invisible synonym: ckuus3.c.
- . Fix carrier sense on Telnet Com Port immediately after dial: ckudia.c.
- . Change krb5_des_blah() arg list: ckutio.c.
- . Fix ttgmdm() for Telnet Com Port: ckutio.c.
- . Fix tthang() return code: ckutio.c.
- . Add aix43gcc+openssl target: makefile.
-
-From Jeff, 25 Apr 2002:
- . Fix SET GUI keyword table: ckuus[37].c.
- . A final fix to Telnet Com Port: ckctel.c, ckcnet.c.
-
-From Jeff, 26 Apr 2002:
- . Another final fix to Telnet Com Port: ckctel.c, ckudia.c.
-
-From Jeff, 27 Apr 2002:
- . separate the wait mechanism for TELNET SB COMPORT synchronous messages
- from the asynchronous TELNET SB COMPORT MODEMSTATUS messages: ckctel.[ch]
- . fix debug messages in Certificate verify functions: ck_ssl.c, ckcftp.c.a
-
-Frank, 27 Apr 2002:
- . Fixed VMS zgetfs() to fail when file doesn't exist: ckvfio.c.
- . Fixed UNIX zgetfs() to check for null or empty arg: ckufio.c.
- . Added #include <time.h> for time() call: ckcmai.c.
- . Add casts to args in tn_wait() calls: ckctel.c.
-
-SINIX-P 5.42 (Pyramid architecture) makefile target from Igor Sobrado.
-makefile (no source-code changes), 1 May 2002.
-
-From Jeff, 5 May 2002,
- . Fix some "unknown host" messages: ckcftp.c.
- . Add more casts to tnc_wait() calls: ckudia.c.
- . Improvements to SHOW SSH, SHOW GUI: ckuus3.c.
- . Fixes to SET COMMAND { WIDTH, HEIGHT }: ckuus3.c.
- . Updates to ck_ssl.[ch], ckctel.c, ckcnet.c.
-
-Fixed the erroneous setting of ssh_cas during switch parsing rather than
-after cmcfm() in setlin(): ckuus7.c, 5 May 2002.
-
-setlin() decomposition (2300 lines), Part One:
-
- . Copied a big chunk from the end of setlin(), beginning with net directory
- lookup, but only the network-specific and common parts, to a new routine,
- cx_net(), 900 lines.
-
- . Extracted many repetitious lines of error-message code from cx_net()
- to a new routine, cx_fail(). Error messages are stored in slmsg, and
- also printed but only if we were not called from a GUI dialog (and
- QUIET wasn't set, etc etc). Any adjutments in this policy can now be
- made in one place.
-
- . I put a call to cx_net() in setlin() just before all the code it replaced.
- It works for TELNET and SET HOST /TELNET.
-
- . Built with mkwatsol-k5k4ssl; after a couple fixes it builds OK and makes
- Kerberized connections OK.
-
- . Copied the serial-port and common parts of the setlin() post-cmcfm()
- code to another new routine, cx_serial(), about 275 lines. Fixed
- messages not to come out when called from GUI dialog, etc. Inserted
- a call to cx_serial() at the appropriate spot in setlin(). Tested
- serial connections on watsun with "set line /dev/ttyh6", works OK.
-
- . Removed all the code from setlin() that was copied to cx_*(). This slims
- setlin() down to 1120 lines. Tested regular Telnet, Kerberized Telnet, and
- serial connections again, all OK. The Unix version of the SSH command is
- OK too.
-
-setlin() deconstruction, Part Two:
-
-Now that we have the common network and serial connection pieces moved out of
-setlin(), we still need to move out the little code snippets for each network
-type that take place between command confirmation and the common code we just
-replaced. As far as I can tell, this needs doing only for SSH. The code
-labeled "Stash everything" copied to cx_ssh() but I didn't remove the original
-code since I can't test this. I think I'm done -- maybe I'm overlooking
-something but I don't know what... First we need to test the heck out of it
-in all command-line versions (K95 and C-Kermit). Then to use this from
-the GUI, see the calling sequences for cx_serial(), cx_net(), and cx_ssh():
-
- . For serial or TAPI connections, the GUI should call cx_serial().
- . For SSH connections, it should call cx_ssh() and then cx_net().
- . For all other network connections, just calls cx_net().
-
-ckuus7.c, Cinco de Mayo de 2002.
-
-New ckuus7.c from Jeff, 8 May 2002. Merge cx_ssh() into cx_net(). Also: I
-had made line[] an automatic variable, since the global line[] buffer is used
-by almost every parsing routine in C-Kermit to hold string fields between
-parsing and execution but Jeff says he found that some code somewhere depended
-on line[] containing the hostname after setlin() was finished.
-
-From Jeff, 10 May 2002:
- . Fix SET SSH STRICT-HOST-CHECKING parse: ckuus3.c.
- . Add prototypes for cx_net() and cx_serial(): ckuusr.h.
- . Add ANSI versions of cx_net() and cx_serial() declarations and supply a
- missing parameter in the cx_serial() invocation, change SSHCMD cx_net()
- invocation to new form.
-
-From Jeff, 16 May 2002:
- . ANSI strictness changes: ck_ssl.[ch]
- . New DIALER command: ckuusr.[ch]
- . Correction to how -0 turns off autodownload: ckuusy.c
- . Prototypes for GUI menu action functions: ckuusr.h.
- . Replace setting of GUI-action variables by function calls: ckuus[3457x].c
- . Fix FTP -z switch parsing: ckcftp.c.
- . Fix SET HOST testing of setlin() return code: ckuus3.c
-
-From Jeff, 18 May 2002:
- . Allow half-size GUI fonts: ckuus[35y].c.
-
-Fixed setguifont() to parse fractional font sizes and round to nearest half
-point. ckuus3.c, 18 May 2002.
-
-For GUI, wrote front ends for getyesno(), readtext(), and readpass():
-
- . uq_ok() prints text and gets Yes/No, OK/Cancel, or just OK response.
- This replaces getyesno() and can also be used for alert or help boxes.
-
- . uq_txt() prints text and gets a single text response. Replaces
- readtext() and readpass().
-
- . uq_mtxt() is like uq_txt() but allows multiple text fields. Replaces
- any combination of readtext() and readpass().
-
-Obviously the #ifdef KUI portions of the uq_blah() routines need filling in.
-ckuusr.h, ckuus3.c, 18 May 2002.
-
-Converted selected getyesno() calls to uq_ok(): ckcftp.c, ckuus3.c, ckuus6.c.
-Some were not converted because it was inappropriate, e.g. DELETE /ASK; others
-because they're in Jeff's code. The most interesting conversions are in the
-DIAL command when DIAL CONFIRMATION is ON. Here there is a dialog for each
-phone number asking if it's OK (ug_ok()) and if not, asking for a replacement
-(uq_txt()); seems to work fine in C-Kermit. All the candidates for uq_mtxt()
-are in Jeff's code. 18 May 2002.
-
-From Jeff: Convert remaining getyesno/readtext/readpass calls to uq_blah()
-so they can be GUI dialogs. ckuus[37].c, ckcftp.c, ckuath.c, ck_ssl.c,
-21 May 2002.
-
-Added KCD command = CD to symbolic directory name (EXEDIR, COMMON, APPDATA,
-TMPDIR, etc etc). ckuusr.h, ckuus[r25].c, 21 May 2002.
-
-From Jeff, 28 May 2002:
- . --title: commandline option: ckuusr.h, ckuusy.c
- . Fix some #includes, move some declarations: ckcfns.c
- . Change K95 version from Dev.00 to Beta.01
- . ASK[Q] /GUI: ckuus6.c.
- . Various GUI screen updates and #ifdefs: ckuus7.c
- . Add missing cx_net() calls to new setlin() for file SuperLAT..: ckuus7.c
- . Updated uq_*() routines for GUI dialogs: ckuus3.c.
-
-Added GETOK switches (/TIMEOUT for all; /POPUP and /GUI for K95G):
-ckuus6.c, 29 May 2002.
-
-Added HELP SET GUI text. ckuus2.c, 29 May 2002.
-
-From Jeff:
- . Another K95-specific #include for ckcfns.c.
- . More items for K95G Actions menu.
- . Change K95G Locus switching to call setlocus() rather than set variable.
- . Ditto for several other variables now settable from Actions menu.
- . Fix SET HOST /NET:SSH status code so IF SUCCESS works.
- . Fix SHOW SSH port-forwarding.
-ckcfns.c, ckuus[r367].c, ckcftp.c, ckcmai.c, 30 May 2002.
-
-Changed SET LOCUS to have a new value, ASK, corresponding to new autolocus
-value of 2, K95G only. Changed setlocus() to not do anything if the new and
-old loci are the same, otherwise to invoke a GUI dialog in K95G if autolocus
-is 2, and also to handle any text messages. Changed SHOW COMMAND to show ASK
-value for SET LOCUS. Rewrote HELP SET LOCUS. ckuusr.[ch], ckuus[23].c,
-ckcftp.c, 30 May 2002.
-
-Add a missing space to Locus popup, and fix Jeff's version of the code to
-compile in C-Kermit. ckuusr.c, 31 May 2002.
-
-From Jeff, for K95 GUI, 6 June 2002:
- . Force some GUI popups to be in foreground: ckuus3.c.
- . Fix SHOW TERM font display: ckuus5.c.
- . Update K95 version numbers and date (4 June 2002): ckcmai.c.
- . Add note about encrypted private keys vs scripts to HELP SET AUTH: ckuus2.c.
- . Fix SET HOST for DECnet: ckuus7.c.
-
---- K95 2.0 ---
-
-From Jeff, 7 June 2002:
- . Fix some #ifdefs for Unix builds (locus, dial, etc): ckuus7.c
- . Add gui_resize_scale_font() prototype: ckuus3.c
- . Add some missing SET GUI commands: ckuus3.c
- . Update version numbers: ckcmai.c
-
---- K95 2.0.1 ---
-
-From Jeff, 11 June 2002:
- . Conditionalize Locus-switching popup text for GUI/Console: ckuusr.c.
- . Fix the SRP_installed_as_server() function. The new API returns TRUE even
- if the SRP config and password files cannot be found. Went back to the old
- API. This bug affects C-Kermit 8 when built with SRP as well as 1.1.21
- through 2.0.1. Since iksdnt.exe has not been shipped yet I fixed it and
- uploaded a new non-beta build of it. ckuath.c.
-
-From Jeff, 12 June 2002:
- . Fix SSH AGENT ADD: ckuusr.c.
- . Fix --facename: option to not fail if name unknown: ckuusy.c.
- . Fixes for OpenSSL 0.9.7 and OpenBSD 3.1: ck_ssl.c.
- . Fix SET AUTH TLS VERIFY NO to prevent a dialog but still a warning if
- SET AUTH TLS VERBOSE ON is set: ck_ssl.c.
- . Fix FTP code to verify the hostname as specified by the user and not
- the hostname discovered by the reverse DNS lookup. For example,
- FTP OPEN kermit.columbia.edu
- should produce a dialog because that name is not in the certificate
- even though ftp.kermit.columbia.edu (the reverse DNS name) is: ckcftp.c.
-
-Add support for Solaris 9 and NetBSD 1.6. makefile, ckuver.h, ckcdeb.h,
-13 Jun 2002.
-
-Discovered that Solaris 9 wants to hide the members of struct FILE, and
-enforces this for 64-bit builds. They offer some functions like __fbufsize()
-to get the info, but not the info we need for reading escape sequences (the
-_cnt member). Let's hear it for political correctness. Created new solaris9g
-(32-bit) and solaris9g64 (64-bit) targets. Sorry, no arrow keys in 64-bit
-mode. Also no more direct access to sys_errlist[]; must use strerror().
-makefile, ckucmd.c, 13 Jun 2002.
-
-Added solaris9g+openssl+zlib+pam+shadow, which in turn required adding
-solaris2xg32+openssl+zlib+pam+shadow, needed for gcc 3.1 in which you have
-to specify 32-bit. Fails for some mysterious reason in link step
-(can't find libssl.so.0.9.6 even though it's there). makefile, 13 Jun 2002.
-
-Solaris 8 empty socket problems again -- tthang() times out, subsequent
-tcsetattr() calls do horrible things. Added a bandaid to ttclos(): don't
-call tcsetattr() any more if hangup timed out. ckutio.c, 14 June 2002.
-
-Gerry B reported the bandaid got us bit farther but Kermit still disappears.
-Added code to reassert the alarm signal handler, since it is likely that
-Solaris has become stricter about this since last time I looked. (Later
-Gerry reported back that this did the trick -- C-Kermit now exits normally
-and releases the lockfile). ttclos(): ckutio.c, 17 Jun 2002.
-
-If you use Kermit to copy a file to a destination file that already exists and
-is longer than the source file, the destination file is not truncated. I had
-mistakenly assumed that setting O_CREAT in the open() call in zcopy() would
-create a new copy of the file. Fixed by also setting O_TRUNC. ckufio.c,
-17 Jun 2002.
-
-Updated HELP INPUT and MINPUT text to explain 0 and -1 timeout values, and
-HELP DIAL to explain about entering CONNECT mode automatically. ckuus2.c,
-17 Jun 2002.
-
-Got rid of client-side "Press the X or E key to cancel" message when giving
-a REMOTE command if QUIET is set or if XFER DISPLAY is NONE. ckuus7.c,
-17 Jun 2002.
-
-From Jeff 25 Jun 2002:
- . Add SUN terminal type: ckuusr.h, ckuus[57].c.
- . Add GUI file transfer display: ckcker.h, ckuus[47x].c.
- . Changes to allow C-Kermit to build with OpenSSL 0.9.7. Current
- C-Kermit code is designed to compile with 0.9.6 and earlier. To
- compile with 0.9.7 you must specify -DOPENSSL_097. This avoids
- missing symbols in the DES library. The functions in OpenSSL were
- renamed in 0.9.7 to avoid link time conflicts with Kerberos 4.
- ckufio.c ck_crp.c ckuath.c ck_ssl.h ck_ssl.c, makefile.
-
-From Jeff 26 Jun 2002:
- . apparently the SSL Passphrase Callback function was not converted
- from readpass() to uq_txt()
- . FTP Authentication failure errors were not being reported to the
- user. So a failure would appear to be a successful completion
- unless FTP DEBUG was ON. Now the message is reported unless
- the QUIET flag is set.
-ck_ssl.c, ckcftp.c.
-
-SET TRANSFER MODE MANUAL didn't work for FTP; fixed in putfile() and getfile():
-ckcftp.c, 1 Jul 2002.
-
-Changed debug log for FTP to log "FTP SENT" and "FTP RECD" for protocol
-messages, just like we do for Telnet, to make it easy to grep them out of
-the log. ckcftp.c, 1 Jul 2002.
-
-In FTP MGET /UPDATE, equal times spuriously caused download. doftpget() was
-misinterpreting chkmodtime()'s return code. ckcftp.c, 3 Jul 2002.
-
-In FTP MGET /RECOVER, recovery is skipped if the local file is newer than
-the remote. This would seem to make sense, but when a download is
-interrupted, the partial file never gets the date of the remote file, so
-the partial file is always newer, and recovery never works. Fixed in
-recvrequest() by commenting out the date check. ckcftp.c, 3 Jul 2002.
-
-A better way to fix the previous problem is to always set the file date from
-the server and then only allow /RECOVER to work when the dates are equal.
-But that's not possible because MDTM is not implemented universally, and it
-conflicts with how Kermit currently works, namely that FTP DATES are OFF by
-default. Also, checking dates prevents [M]GET /RECOVER from working with
-files that were incompletely downloaded by some other FTP client.
-
-In FTP MGET /RECOVER <wildcard> <wildcard> ..., the first file in each group
-is always downloaded. Diagnosis: Kermit sends "TYPE A" prior to NLST (as it
-must). Then when it sends its first SIZE command, it's still in ASCII mode,
-so the server sends the "ASCII size" rather than the binary size, which does
-not agree with the size of the local file (which was downloaded in binary
-mode), so recovery is always attempted even when the files are identical. The
-TYPE A command is sent by initconn(). After the remote_files() call, we have
-to change the type back to the prevailing type before sending the first SIZE
-command. Fixed in cmdlinget() and doftpget(): ckcftp.c, 3 Jul 2002.
-
-In FTP MGET /EXCEPT:<pattern> used with SET XFER DISPLAY brief, files that
-are skipped just say ERROR instead of saying why they were skipped. Fixed
-in doftpget(): ckcftp.c, 3 Jul 2002.
-
-Added EXIT to top-level HELP text. ckuus2.c, 13 Jul 2002.
-
-Strip braces in REINPUT n {string}. ckuusr.c, 13 Jul 2002.
-
-Added /QUIET switch to ASK-class commands. This means not to print any error
-messages when an ASK-class command times out waiting for a response. Made
-sure that when a timeout occurs, the command fails. Also made sure the
-c-Kermit prompt doesn't write over the ASK prompt if ASK times out. Also
-fixed ASK, when it times out, not to return -9, which it did in one case,
-which causes a command-stack dump. ckuus[267].c, ckucmd.c, 13 Jul 2002.
-
-Fixed SET FILE INCOMPLETE help text, which said that both KEEP and AUTO were
-the default. ckuus2.c, 13 Jul 2002.
-
-If you SET FTP DEB ON and then turn it OFF, the MGET temp file is still kept.
-Fixed by getting rid of ftp_knf variable and using ftp_deb to control whether
-temp file is deleted (ftp_knf was being set from ftp_deb anyway, but then
-wasn't being reset by SET FTP DEB OFF). ckcftp.c, 13 Jul 2002.
-
-If an FTP transfer was in progress but the FTP connection drops and automatic
-locus switching is enabled, the locus does not change; thus (for example) a
-subsequent DELETE command makes Kermit send a REMOTE DELETE packet on stdout.
-Fixed in lostpeer(): ckcftp.c, 13 Jul 2002.
-
-For docs: FTP CD with no arg might not be accepted by the server; e.g. the
-Kermit FTP server says "501 Invalid number of arguments".
-
-The FTP module never handled SET INCOMPLETE. Fixed in doftprecv2(). ckcftp.c,
-13 Jul 2002.
-
-When FTP DATES is ON, we set an incoming file's date only if the file was
-received successfully. Changed the code to set the file's date even if it was
-received only partially (assuming we can get the date from server). ckcftp.c,
-13 Jul 2002.
-
-Suppose we were doing FTP MGET /UPDATE from a server directory of 100,000
-files. Kermit would send a SIZE command for every file unconditionally. On
-some connections, e.g. to the Red Hat Rawhide server, each one could take up
-to 30 seconds. That would be 3 million seconds = 34 days. Don't send a SIZE
-command during the selection phase unless a /SMALLER or /LARGER selector was
-given. Once the file is selected, send a SIZE command only if one hadn't been
-sent for that file already. ckcftp.c, 13 Jul 2002.
-
-Made [M]GET and [M]PUT /UPDATE switch imply FTP DATES ON, since they didn't
-work unless it was. ckcftp.c, 13 Jul 2002.
-
-Added FTP [M]GET /DATES-DIFFER, which is like /UPDATE except it selects files
-that are newer or older, rather than only newer. This allows updates from
-sources where files might be rolled back to earlier versions. It's a bit
-dangerous if you use it without knowing what it's for, since it allows older
-files to overwrite newer ones. (Code is also in place for [M]PUT
-/DATES-DIFFER, and it works, but I commented it out because it's either
-useless or dangerous since when uploading, you can't set the the file dates
-when they are arrive on the server.) ckcftp.c, 13 Jul 2002.
-
-Changed chkmodtime() to remember if MDTM fails on a particular connection
-because it's an unknown command (500, 502, or 202), and if so, not to ask
-again. ckcftp.c, 13 Jul 2002.
-
-With this last change, I think it's safe to change the default for FTP DATES
-from OFF to ON. ckcftp.c, 13 Jul 2002.
-
-Increased max number of /EXCEPT: patterns from 8 to 64 for file transfer (not
-necessarily for other things). This is now a compile-time symbol NSNDEXCEPT.
-ckcker.h, ckcmai.c, ckclib.c, ckcfns.c, ckcftp.c, ckuus[rx].c. 13 Jul 2002.
-
-Fixed FTP MGET to not send SIZE command when there is a name collision and
-FILE COLLISION is DISCARD, even if /SMALLER or /LARGER were also specified.
-ckcftp.c, 15 Jul 2002.
-
-MGET fails if no files were transferred, even if the reason is that no files
-met the selection critieria: /COLLISION:DISCARD, /UPDATE, /SMALLER, etc.
-Changed MGET to succeed in that case. domget(): ckcftp.c, 16 Jul 2002.
-
-Big problems with canceling MGET; Ctrl-C cancels the current file, but we
-don't break out of the file loop, we just go on to the next file. Worse, if
-we're executing a command file that has a series of MGETs, Ctrl-C doesn't
-break us out of the command file. Fixed by making failftprecv() and
-failftprecv2() "chain" to the main SIGINT handler, trap(). This is fine in
-Unix, but I'd be really surprised if it works in K95 so I put it in #ifndef
-OS2. Ditto for MPUT: Added the same treatment to failftpsend() and
-failftpsend2(). Ditto for cmdcancel(). To adapt to K95, search for "TEST ME
-IN K95" (5 places). ckcftp.c, 16 Jul 2002.
-
-Fixed previous fix to account for the fact that failftpblah() can be called
-not only upon Ctrl-C, but also if transfer interrupted with X or Z.
-ckcftp.c, 16 Jul 2002.
-
-Yesterday's fixes revealed another problem: Interrupt MGET with Ctrl-C, start
-another MGET, and the file list is total garbage. Diagnosis: secure_getc()
-and secure_getbyte() use internal static buffer pointers. The only way they
-ever get reset is when the data connection is closed by the server, so if you
-interrupt a GET, the pointers are not reset and the next network read (e.g. of
-an NLST response) returns whatever junk was lying around in the old buffer.
-ckcftp.c, 17 Jul 2002.
-
-FTP MGET temp file is kept only if FTP DEBUG is ON. Changed FTP module to
-also keep it if the regular debug log is active. ckcftp.c, 17 Jul 2002.
-
-Fixed version test in ckermit.ini: should be 6 digits, not 5. 17 Jul 2002.
-
-Changed C-Kermit version number to 8.0.205 so scripts can test for the
-recent changes. ckcmai.c, 18 Jul 2002.
-
----8.0.205---
-
-SET FILE COLLISION UPDATE would unset FTP DATES due to a typo in the recent
-changes. ckcftp.c, 21 Jul 2002.
-
-FTP [M]GET /DATES-DIFFER really should have been a collision option. Added
-this option (implemented for FTP only) to both SET FTP COLLISION and the
-FTP [M]GET /COLLISION: table, so this way if you have lots of [M]GETs, you
-don't have to put /DATES-DIFFER on each one. ckcker.h, ckcftp.c, 21 Jul 2002.
-
-"FTP MGET a* b* c*" would fail to get any c*'s if no b*'s existed.
-ckcftp.c, 21 Jul 2002.
-
-From Jeff, 22 Jul 2002:
- . Beginnings of Ann Arbor Ambassador terminal emulation for K95;
- ckuus[57].c, ckuusr.h.
- . Bump K95 version number to 2.0.2: ckcmai.c
-
-Added -DCK_PAM -DCK_SHADOW to all Solaris targets, 2.6 and above. makefile,
-23 Jul 2002.
-
-Discovered that CK_SCRIPTS path search for TAKE files was #ifdef'd out
-except for K95. Fixed in ckuusr.c, 25 Jul 2002.
-
-From Jeff: changes to support K95 italics: ckuus[57].c, 25 Jul 2002.
-
-Fixed path search for TAKE to not search the CK_SCRIPTS path if the filespec
-contains any directory or path parts. Added a new function to check for
-this: int hasnopath(filespec) in ckucmd.c: 26 Jul 2002.
-
-Update HP-UX build instructions from PeterE: makefile, 26 Jul 2002.
-
-Commented out "const" from struct pam_message declarations because it
-causes "initialization type mismatch" warnings. ckufio.c, 26 Jul 2002.
-
-Suppose you have a network directory containing a listing for host "foo":
-
- foo tcp/ip foo.bar.com
-
-Then in K95 you give a command "set host /network-type:ssh foo". This
-results in the directory lookup replacing the "ssh" network type with TCP/IP,
-and making a Telnet connection. Fix attempted at about line 8625 of ckuus7.c
-in cx_net(); needs testing in K95. 26 Jul 2002.
-
-FTP Password: prompt in Unix was not allowing editing. The code looked right;
-I put in some debugging and suddenly it worked. Took out the debugging and
-it still worked. Maybe I dreamed it. Anyway, I fixed the "FTP SENT" debug
-log entry to not record the password, and removed a redundant section above
-to log the same thing, but prior to any charset conversion. ckcftp.c,
-27 Jul 2002.
-
-From Jeff, 28 Jul 2002:
- . Fix typo in initxlist(): ckcmai.c.
- . Fix typo in Friday's set-host fix: ckuus7.c.
- . Move parsing of --height/width command-line args after prescan(): ckuusy.c.
-
-Added invisible top-level SITE and PASSIVE commands for FTP as a convenience
-for habituated FTP client users. ckuusr.[ch], ckcftp.c, 28 Jul 2002.
-
-A while back a user asked if it was possible to MGET a bunch of files from
-an FTP server and have them all appended to each other upon arrival. The
-obvious way to do this would have been:
-
- mget /collision:append /as-name:bigfile *.*
-
-But to make this work, I had to get rid of the "as-name must contain
-variables" check in the MGET parser. doftpget(): ckcftp.c, 28 Jul 2002.
-
-Verified that it was possible to do the same thing (GET a bunch of files
-and append them all into one result file) with Kermit protocol. It works
-fine but in this case there is no /COLLISION switch; you have to SET FILE
-COLLISION APPEND first. 30 Jul 2002.
-
-Changed COPY /APPEND to allow wild source to single destination file, e.g.
-"copy /append *.* bigfile". ckuus6.c, 30 Jul 2002.
-
-From Mark Berryman: a replacement for zchkpath(), the VMS routine that checks
-whether a file is in the current directory; the old one (that I wrote) was
-a hack that only worked sometimes. Martin Vorlaender verified Mark's code in
-the situation where mine was breaking (server running in captive account).
-ckvfio.c, 30 Jul 2002.
-
-PeterE reported a problem with SWITCH case labels that start with '#':
-The problem is that the SWITCH variable contents in this case happens to be
-a comment, e.g.:
-
- CMD(M)[_forward # Stand: 24.07.2002<CR>]
-
-so the GOTO target is null. The solution would be for SWITCH to put the GOTO
-(_FORWARD) target in quotes. But GOTO does not strip quotes or braces from
-around its target. Fixed in ckuusr.c, 30 Jul 2002.
-
-Fixed the SWITCH macro definition to put the _FORWARD target in quotes.
-ckuus5.c, 30 Jul 2002.
-
-PeterE also reported that an empty SWITCH case label did not work. There's no
-particular reason why it should, but after a brief look, it wasn't that hard
-so I did it. It required commenting out the check for empty labels and fixing
-the comparison in dogoto(). Now it's possible to read lines from a file and
-use each line as a SWITCH variable, with patterns as case labels, including an
-empty label to match empty lines, #* labels to match comment lines, etc.
-ckuus[r6].c, 30 Jul 2002.
-
-PeterE also reported the value of \%* acquiring a trailing blank when
-referenced inside a SWITCH statment. This happens because \%* is formed using
-\fjoin() on the \&_[] array based on its dimension, and at some point the
-dimension is spuriously increased by one. As a workaround, I made \fjoin()
-ignore trailing empty \&_[] array elements and oddly enough this also fixed
-the growing dimensions problem. The many script torture tests reveal no ill
-effects, so it seems like a keeper. ckuus4.c, 30 Jul 2002.
-
-Some of Peter's sample scripts made C-Kermit 8.0.201 dump core, but no more.
-
-Fixed "delete xxx" to print an error message and fail if if xxx does not exist.
-Ditto for when xxx is a directory. ckuus6.c, 30 Jul 2002.
-
-Patches to SSL modules from Jeff based on yesterday's advisory. ck_ssl.[ch],
-31 Jul 2002.
-
-Fixed some typos affecting the filename collision action during command-line
-FTP [M]GET. ckcftp.c, 31 Jul 2002.
-
-Fixed SHOW FTP to handle FTP COLLISION DATES-DIFFER. ckcftp.c, 31 Jul 2002.
-
-A while back someone pointed out that SET CONTROL UNPREFIX ALL and SET
-PREFIXING NONE gave different results. Fixed them to use the same code.
-Also made "set prefixing none" visible. ckuus3.c, 4 Aug 2002.
-
-Added SET CD HOME <path>, to let the user specify which directory is intended
-when "CD" or "KCD" is given by itself. This is because in Windows, some
-applications set up their own HOME environment variable that isn't necessarily
-where the user wants "cd" to go, but redefining HOME can interfere with the
-application (example: Windows EMACS). SET CD HOME was done by adding a myhome
-variable, initially a NULL pointer, and then changing homepath() to use it if
-it is set. zhome() is not affected. Also the homepath() prototype had been
-missing from header files. ckcmai.c, ckuusr.h, ckuus[2345].c, 4 Aug 2002.
-
-PeterE got another core dump with his SWITCH statement. Found a place where
-an out-of-bounds array reference could occur if the switch variable was
-empty. ckuus6.c, 5 Aug 2002.
-
-PeterE noticed that if the switch variable contained a comma, spurious matches
-could occur with the label pattern. The real problem turns out to be what
-happens when the SWITCH variable doesn't match any of the case labels and
-there is no DEFAULT label. Fixed by having dogoto() in the SWITCH (_FORWARD)
-case pop the command stack before returning failure, i.e. by moving the
-"if (stopflg) return(0);" statement down a few lines. ckuus6.c, 5 Aug 2002.
-
-PeterE noticed that a SWITCH case label of :* did not match an empty SWITCH
-variable. Fixed in doswitch(): ckuus6.c, 6 Aug 2002.
-
-In testing the previous fix, I found it only worked sometimes. Inspection
-of the debug log showed that a statement like:
-
- if (y == -3) s = "{}";
-
-was assigning "{" rather than "{}" to s. Replacing the string constant by a
-buffer containing the same string fixed it. The reason (guessed correctly by
-PeterE) was the following sequence:
-
- y = cmfld("Variable name","",&s,xxstring);
- if (y == -3) s = "{}";
- len = ckstrncpy(tmpbuf,brstrip(s),TMPBUFSIZ);
-
-brstrip() (by design and as documented) affects the string in place. But in
-this case the string is a constant, not data in a buffer, so all further uses
-of "{}" get the wrong string (at least in optimized builds). The only real
-cure is to change brstrip() to make a copy of its argument if it has to do
-anything to it. This will slow down some scripts, but it's too risky to
-leave it as it was. ckclib.c, 6 Aug 2002.
-
-The previous change required an audit of the C-Kermit code to make sure that
-no references to brstrip() depended the result buffer being persistent, or the
-result pointer indicating a position in the source buffer. Oops, it turns out
-that thousands of places rely on brstrip() working in place. Therefore the
-change had to be undone. There's no good way to write a dummy-proof brstrip();
-programmers either have be sure they're not calling it with a pointer to a
-string constant, or else they have to copy the result back to the right place
-each time. Better to leave it as it was and audit the code to fix any calls
-that refer to string constants (turns out there were only two). Restored the
-original fix to doswitch() (replacing the string constant by a buffer holding
-the same string), plus minor fixes to ckcftp.c, ckuus[r36].c, 6 Aug 2002.
-
-We need file dialogs in several situations in the K95 GUI. I added a "user
-query" routine for this, uq_file(), in ckuus3.c, filling it in only for Unix.
-Then I added code to call it from rcvfil() when (a) it's an autodownload, and
-(b) SET TERM AUTODOWNLOAD is ASK (I just added this option; it needs to be set
-to see it in action -- maybe it should be the default for KUI, in which case
-initialize "int autodl = ?" to TAD_ASK in ckcmai.c). Works fine, except of
-course it interferes with the file-transfer display, but that won't be a
-problem in K95G. ckuusr.h, ckuus[37].c, ckcfns.c, ckucns.c, 6 Aug 2002.
-
-Another place we need a file dialog is when Kermit is a URL interpreter. The
-problem is: how can we let the user decide whether Kermit should ask? There
-really isn't any way. Either it always asks or it never does. In this case I
-think it makes sense to always ask if it's KUI, otherwise never. I added the
-code for ftp: URLs to to doftprecv2(), which I tested successfully in Unix
-before putting it into #ifdef KUI..#endif. Also added code for http[s] to
-ckuusy.c in #ifdef KUI..#endif, not tested.
-
-Still need this added for K95G Actions->Capture. The clearest example is the
-FTP one. Just search for KUI in the FTP module.
-
-Some minor adjustments to yesterday's work, mainly just comments, plus
-generate the full pathname for the default file. ckuus3.c, ckcftp.c,
-7 Aug 2002.
-
-Note: for some reason cmofi() is not supplying the default value if user
-enters an empty name... (but that won't affect the Windows version).
-
-Added /USER: and /PASSWORD: switches to SET TCP { HTTP-PROXY, SOCKS-SERVER }.
-ckuus3.c, 7 Aug 2002.
-
-New 'uninstall' target from PeterE, works by having the 'install' target
-write an UNINSTALL shell script. makefile, 8 Aug 2002.
-
-Added some debugging statements to the VMS communications i/o module to try
-to track down a problem that occurs when the controlling terminal is a LAT
-device. ckvtio.c, 10 Aug 2002.
-
-Fixed the non-K95 uq_file() to respect the given default name, but still show
-the fully qualified absolute pathname for the default in the dialog. The
-reason to not use the fully qualifed name as the default in the cmxxx() calls
-is that this can easily result in a whole directory tree being created due to
-directory aliases, symlinks, etc. So when you get a file by referring to its
-URL (e.g. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/READ.ME), uq_file() converts the
-READ.ME part to (e.g.) /home/fdc/tmp/READ.ME but gives just "READ.ME" as the
-default when parsing the name. This way the user knows where it will go and
-gets an opportunity to change it, and if the default is accepted, it goes into
-the current directory. uq_file(): ckuus3.c, 10 Aug 2002.
-
-Found the spot for calling uq_file() for kermit:// URL downloads. Added
-prefatory text to filename prompts for Kermit and FTP downloads. ckcfns.c,
-ckcftp.c, 10 Aug 2002.
-
-Now with kermit:// or ftp:// URL downloads there's no way to disable the
-prompting. I could easily make SET TERMINAL AUTODOWNLOAD ASK cover these
-cases too (even though "terminal" has nothing to do with FTP or URL
-downloads). OK, I did this, but now prompting is disabled by default.
-ckcftp.c, ckcfns.c. 10 Aug 2002.
-
-Enabled file prompting (adl_ask) by default in K95G, disabled it by default
-everywhere else. So now FTP and Kermit URL downloads as well as terminal-mode
-Kermit (but not Zmodem) downloads are prompted for if TERMINAL AUTODOWNLOAD is
-ASK, which is it by default only in K95G. But this will happen only if
-uq_file() is filled in for K95G; otherwise everything should work as before.
-ckcmai.c, 10 Aug 2002.
-
-Notes:
- . Need a better command to control this.
- . FTP URL downloads are almost instantaneous, whereas Kermit URL downloads
- take a really long time to set up (logging in takes at least 10 seconds).
-
-From Jeff, 13 Aug 2002:
- . Increase K95 version to 2.1.0: ckcmai.c.
- . SET TCP { HTTP-PROXY, SOCKS-SERVER } /USER: /PASSWORD: actions: ckuus3.c.
-
-From PeterE: a new install target that's only about half as a big as the
-previous one, yet still generates an UNINSTALL script. makefile, 13 Aug 2002.
-
-Vace wanted to be able to give the FTP client an offset for the server time,
-in case the server's time (or timezone) is set incorrectly. I added this by
-building on all the date/time parsing/arithmetic code -- notably delta times
--- that was done for C-Kermit 8.0. The new command is SET FTP
-SERVER-TIME-OFFSET delta-time; shows up in SHOW FTP and HELP SET FTP.
-ckcftp.c, 13 Aug 2002.
-
-Fixed HELP ASK and HELP GETOK text. ckuus2.c, 14 Aug 2002.
-
-Fixed GETOK to accept /GUI switch even in K95.EXE and C-Kermit, just like ASK
-does (in which case, it just ignores it). ckuus6.c, 14 Aug 2002.
-
-SET XFER CHAR TRANSPARENT no longer disables character-set translation because
-file-scanning turns it back on. The "new way" to disable character-set
-translation is SET XFER TRANSLATION OFF. This needlessly confuses users who
-expect the old way to still work. So I fixed SET XFER CHAR TRANSPARENT to set
-XFER TRANSLATION OFF, and SET XFER CHAR anything-else to set it back ON.
-ckuus3.c, 15 Aug 2002.
-
-Fixed SET TERM AUTODOWNLOAD { ON, OFF } to turn off the ASK flag (adl_ask).
-ckuus7.c, 16 Aug 2002.
-
-Added FEAT query to FTP client from draft-ietf-ftpext-mlst-13.txt. FEAT is
-sent along with REST 0, MODE S, and STRU F if /NOINIT is not included in the
-FTP OPEN command. Parsing the FEAT result is handled by turning the "auth"
-argument to getreply() into a function code: GRF_AUTH to parse AUTH reply;
-GRF_FEAT to parse FEAT reply. For GRF_FEAT, getreply() fills in a flag array,
-sfttab[] (server feature table); sfttab[0] > 0 means server responded to the
-FEAT query, in which case individual elements are set > 0 for each supported
-feature. ckcftp.c, 18 Aug 2002.
-
-If server sends a feature list, display it if FTP DEBUG is on, then set mdtmok
-and sizeok (the flags that say whether it's OK to send MDTM and SIZE commands)
-accordingly. If user gives an [M]PUT /RECOVER command and server has
-announced it doesn't support REST, print a warning but try anyway (maybe
-change this later). Responses about other features that we use such as AUTH
-and PBSZ are ignored for now -- i.e. we try them anyway. And of course
-responses for features we don't care about (LANG, TVFS, PROT) are ignored.
-ckcftp.c, 18 Aug 2002.
-
-If the server says it supports MLST, use MLSD instead of NLST to get the file
-list. This is done in remote_files() with some simple string-twiddling. Then
-replace the relevant (but not all) SIZE commands with code to first check if
-we already got the size from the MLSD response and use that instead rather
-than asking again. Same deal for MDTM. ckcftp.c, 18 Aug 2002.
-
-Checked that this works when giving pathnames in the MGET filespec. Checked
-to make sure everything works as before with servers that don't support FEAT
-or MLSD. Checked to make sure FTP OPEN blah /NOINIT worked with servers that
-do support FEAT and MLSD. Checked that FTP CHECK works. It's all OK.
-
-Tested only with Ipswitch server; need to find and test with others.
-
-The stack of temp files needed for MGET /RECURSIVE is annoying because what
-if we run out of file descriptors... But the spec doesn't provide a way to
-request a recursive listing.
-
-Supplied a missing comma in HELP SET CD text. ckuus2.c, 19 Aug 2002.
-
-Generalized parsing of MLST/MLSD file facts and values. Got file type from
-server and had MGET skip non-regular files. ckcftp.c, 19 Aug 2002.
-
-Kirk Turner-Rustin <ktrustin@owu.edu> reported that if Unix C-Kermit has a SET
-HOST PTY connection (e.g. SSH) open, local window size changes are not
-propogated through the connection to the host. I imagine that must be because
-the SIGWINCH signal is caught by Kermit and its children don't see it; maybe
-if I pass it along to the child fork, all will be OK. Began by exporting
-"slavepid" from the pty module and changing its name to pty_fork_pid. Moved
-the SIGWINCH handler, winchh(), from ckctel.c to ckutio.c. Armed it from Unix
-sysinit() so it's always armed. This way window changes affect Unix C-Kermit
-no matter what mode it's in: tt_rows, tt_cols, cmd_rows, and cmd_cols are all
-kept in sync. Then if we're not in remote mode (i.e. we have a ttyfd), we
-call tn_snaws() and rlog_snaws() (which should be ok since they return right
-away if the appropriate kind of connection is not open) and then if
-(pty_fork_pid > -1), a SIGWINCH signal is sent to it. ckupty.c, ckctel.c,
-ckutio.c, 20 Aug 2002.
-
-All this works fine except the PTY part; in other words, the original problem
-is not fixed. The "kill(pty_fork_pid,SIGWINCH)" call executes without error
-but has no effect because the size of the PTY never changed. To make this
-work I had to add an ioctl() to change the size of the PTY before sending it
-the SIGWINCH. Compiles and works ok on Linux and Solaris; Kirk also confirmed
-it for AIX 4.3.3. ckutio.c, 20 Aug 2002.
-
-Fixed xlookup() to work for uppercase keywords. ckucmd.c, 20 Aug 2002.
-
-Fixed FTP parsefeat() and parsefacts() to use xlookup() instead of lookup(),
-since abbreviated keywords are not allowed. ckcftp.c, 20 Aug 2002.
-
-Adjusted some lines from yesterday's window-size code for platforms I hadn't
-tried yet. ckutio.c, 21 Aug 2002.
-
-EXIT from K95 when it has an FTP connection open and it pops up the
-Locus dialog. Made it not do this if it knows it's in the act of EXITing.
-ckuus[rx].c, 22 Aug 2002.
-
-In K95, FTP GET in ASCII mode results in a file with Unix line terminators
-even though the protocol is correct:
-
- RETR smjulie.txt
- 150 Opening ASCII mode data connection for smjulie.txt (1878 bytes).
-
-The source file is a regular Unix text file with LF at the end of each line.
-It's incredible that nobody noticed this before. It only came to light when
-somebody tried to open a downloaded text file with Notepad, which doesn't
-handle Unix-format files (Wordpad and Emacs have no problems with them). The
-problem was in doftprecv2() in the FTT_ASC section. There was no conditional
-code for Unix vs Windows. In all cases, the code discarded incoming CR's in
-ASCII mode. I put the CR-discarding code in #ifdef UNIX..#endif. ckcftp.c,
-22 Aug 2002.
-
-Removed super-verbose debugging from gtword(): ckucmd.c, 23 Aug 2002.
-
-Gregory Bond reported a problem with "if defined \$(BLAH) ..." inside of a
-SWITCH statement. It wasn't really the SWITCH that was doing it, it was the
-fact that he had enclosed the SWITCH case in braces, which made it an
-"immediate macro" (XXMACRO). The XXMACRO code parsed the macro definition
-(the part inside the braces) with cmtxt(...,xxstring), which should have been
-cmtxt(...,NULL) to defer the evaluation of the interior of the macro until it
-was executed. This is better illustrated with the following example:
-
- { echo START, for \%i 1 3 1 { echo \%i }, echo STOP }
-
-which totally fell on its face prior to the fix. Also fixed ?-help for
-immediate macros, which was broken too. ckuusr.c, 23 Aug 2002.
-
-RFC959 says STOU does not take an argument. But every FTP server I've
-encountered but one accepts the arg and constructs the unique name from it,
-which is better than making up a totally random name for the file, which is
-what RFC959 calls for. Especially because there is no way for the client to
-find out the name chosen by the server (because RFC 959 and 1123 are
-contradictory, plus no servers follow either one of them for this anyway). So
-we try STOU with the argument first, which works with most servers, and if it
-fails, we retry it without the arg, for the benefit of the one picky server
-that is not "liberal in what it accepts" UNLESS the first STOU got a 502 code
-("not implemented") which means STOU is not accepted, period (which happens
-with ProFTPD). ckcftp.c, 25 Aug 2002.
-
-Added SET FTP ANONYMOUS-PASSWORD (plus help text and show value). ckcftp.c,
-25 Aug 2002.
-
-Made FTP command "not available" if NOFTP is defined. ckuusr.c, 25 Aug 2002.
-
-Forced client to send a TYPE command upon initial connection, since given
-the variable quality of FTP servers, it's not safe to assume the server is
-in ASCII or any other particular mode. ckcftp.c, 25 Aug 2002.
-
-SET FTP CHARACTER-SET-TRANSLATION ON is completely broken in K95, although it
-works fine in C-Kermit. Furthermore it is broken in both the GUI and Console
-versions, so it's not a Unicode vs OEM console-character-set issue.
-
-Added Concurrent PowerMAX OS target from Tom Horsley. makefile, ckuver.h,
-27 Aug 2002.
-
-Minor fixes to FTP module from Jeff. ckcftp.c, 27 Aug 2002.
-
-New Makefile target for Mac OS X 10.2, needs -DNDSYSERRLIST added, from
-William Bader. 2 Sep 2002.
-
-SET OPT DIR /DOTFILES didn't work for server listings. A few years ago when
-I front-ended zxpand() with nzxpand(), I missed a couple places where
-traverse() needed to refer to xmatchdot (nzxpand's argument flag) rather than
-global matchdot. Fixed in traverse(): ckufio.c, 2 Sep 2002.
-
-From Jeff, 4 Sep 2002:
- . setautodl(x) -> setautodl(x,y): ckuusr.h, ckuus[7y].c
- . Add another parameter to popup_readblah(): ckuus6.c
- . Sort out some confusion in scanfile() where a parameter was also used as a
- local flag. ckuusx.c.
- . Protect restoring of saved terminal idle parameters with a flag that says
- they were actually saved. ckuusr.c.
- . Rework uq_text() and uq_mtxt(). ckuus3.c.
- . Fix FTP charset translation for little-endian hardware: ckcftp.c.
-
-The latter still doesn't work in Linux:
-
- (/home/fdc/kermit/) C-Kermit>set ftp server-character-set latin1-iso
- (/home/fdc/kermit/) C-Kermit>set file character-set utf8
- (/home/fdc/kermit/) C-Kermit>get latin1.txt
-
-Results in "????????: file not found". But it works fine on the Sun.
-
-Jeff's patch removed a little-endian byte-swap (LEBS) from doftpsend2(). But
-the real problem was that LEBS was not being done consistently throughout the
-module. There were similar xgnbyte()/xpnbyte() loops elsewhere in the code,
-and all of them needed to work the same way. Undoing Jeff's fix and then
-adding the LEBS to the loop in getreply() makes downloads work right, but the
-messages are still messed up (they come out in Chinese :-) Begin by moving all
-byte-swapping operations that occur in ckcftp.c itself into a new function,
-bytswap(). It's either right to do it all the time, or to do it never; this
-way we can turn it on and off in one place.
-
-xp/gnbyte() include behavior that depends on what Kermit is doing: W_SEND,
-etc. xpnbyte() tests W_KERMIT, which is a combination of W_SEND, W_RECV, etc.
-Defined a new symbol W_XFER, which is like W_KERMIT but includes W_FTP. These
-are all the "whats" in which character sets might need to be converted.
-Changed the W_KERMIT reference in xpnbyte() to W_XFER. Fixed the inderminate
-"what" state after an FTP command by moving "what = W_COMMAND;" from before
-the main parse loop to inside it (this didn't matter before the addition of
-FTP but now it does). ckcker.h, ckcftp.c, ckuus5.c, 6 Sep 2002.
-
-Finally I changed xlatec() to be consistent with all the other xgnbyte() /
-xpnbyte() usage throughout the FTP module and, poof, everything worked in
-Linux (and still works on the Sun). We still need some work in Windows (where
-the file character-set is not necessarily the console character set for
-messages) but we can tackle that next. ckcftp.c, 6 Sep 2002.
-
-Checking yesterday's work:
-
-Kermit file transfers with charset translation work fine in both directions.
-
-FTP GET with charset translation works fine on both BE and LE
-
-Fixed a typo in yesterday's changes that made FTP PUT with charset translation
-always upload 0-length files. ckcftp.c, 7 Sep 2002.
-
-FTP PUT (after the typo was fixed) with charset translation works fine on BE,
-but on LE the message comes out in Chinese and the resulting file gets ? or
-nothing for all for the accented letters:
-
- FTP... Kermit
- Up Dn Up Dn Term
- BE OK OK OK OK xx
- LE no OK OK OK xx
-
-xx = C-Kermit CONNECT mode with translation doesn't seem to do anything, not
-only in today's code, but also in the 8.0 release version: "set term char
-latin1 utf8" -- SHOW CHAR shows the right stuff, but no translation is done.
-Ditto for the 7.0 release. That can't be right...
-
-But one problem at a time -- what's wrong with LE FTP uploads? Note that
-XLATE works on the same machine, so it's obviously confusion in xgnbyte()
-about "what". Suppose we make xgnbyte() ALWAYS return bytes in BE order.
-This makes sense because xgnbyte() is almost always used to feed xpnbyte(),
-and xpnbyte() requires its bytes to come in BE order. This means that all
-code that uses xgnbyte()/xpnbyte() loops can be simplifed, which I did for
-the FTP module. ckcfns.c, ckcftp.c, 7 Sep 2002.
-
-Of course Kermit protocol uses xgnbyte() too, but only for filling
-packets, and packets never contain UCS2 and even if they did, it would have
-to be big-endian, so no changes needed for getpkt(). Now we have:
-
- FTP... Kermit
- Up Dn Up Dn
- BE OK OK OK OK
- LE OK OK OK OK
-
-Now let's look at the remaining xgnbyte() calls in the rest of the code:
-
-ckuus4.c:
- xlate() uses it of course. I simplified the general-case loop.
- Works OK on both Sun and Linux.
-
-ckuus6.c:
- typegetline() uses it. I commented out the byte swap. Seems OK.
-
-Built and tested on Linux, Solaris, and SunOS. I'm sure I must have broken
-something, but the main things are better than they were. Kermit and FTP
-transfers need testing in K95, as well as the TYPE command (there's a bunch of
-special K95 code in there). C-Kermit charset translation during CONNECT is
-still broken, or else I forgot how to use it, but that's a separate issue
-since xgnbyte()/xpnbyte() are not involved. And we still need to do something
-in FTP getreply() for K95 to convert messages to the console character set for
-display, rather than the file character set (should be trivial). Also there's
-still a lot of extra debugging and commented-out junk in ckcftp.c to be
-cleaned up after more testing.
-
-During yesterday's testing, I noticed that REMOTE SET { FILE, XFER }
-CHARACTER-SET didn't work. The server accepted these commands but they didn't
-seem to do anything. In fact, they did work, but they were undone later by
-code in sfile() that restored the global settings in case they had been
-temporarily overridden by autoswitching or whatever. The solution is to
-"unsave" the saved values whenever a global setting is performed explicitly.
-Tested successfully against Sun and Linux servers. Also the server end of
-REMOTE SET needed updating for Unicode. ckcfn[s3].c, ckuus3.c, 8 Sep 2002.
-
-Cleaned commented-out cruft and extra debugging from ckcftp.c. 8 Sep 2002.
-
-Kermit autodownload with ASK file dialog: if user supplied an absolute
-pathname, it was treated like a relative one. Fixed the invocation of
-uq_file() in rcvfil() to temporarily override the RECEIVE PATHNAMES setting.
-ckcfns.c, 10 Sep 2002.
-
-Added SET TERMINAL ROLL KEYSTROKES { SEND, RESTORE-AND-SEND, IGNORE }, parse
-only. Needs implementation (search for tt_rkeys and rollkeytab in ckuus7.c).
-ckuusr.h, ckuus[27].c, 10 Sep 2002.
-
-If FILE INCOMPLETE is DISCARD and a file is being received by IKSD but IKSD
-gets a Telnet LOGOUT command, the partial file is not deleted. In fact this
-happens any time doexit() is called for any reason during file reception,
-e.g. because of SIGHUP. Added code to doclean() to check if a download
-output file was open, and if so, to delete it after closing it if keep==0.
-ckuusx.c, 10 Sep 2002.
-
-Added a brief one-line message after remote-mode file transfer saying
-what (or how many) file(s) were transferred, where they went, and whether
-the transfer was successful -- kind of an automatic WHERE command, useful
-with autodownloads so you know what happened. ckcpro.w, 11 Sep 2002.
-
-The Unix and VMS C-Kermit CONNECT modules have botched remote-charset to
-local-UTF8 translation ever since the Unicode was first added in v7.0. Fixed
-in ckucns.c, ckucon.c, ckvcon.c, 11 Sep 2002.
-
-On to pattern-matching... The matchdot business should apply only for (Unix)
-filename matching, not for general string matching. Fixed in ckmatch():
-ckclib.c, 11 Sep 2002.
-
-A bigger problem occurs in filename matching. Somehow the dirsep == fence
-business interferes with matching {foo,bar,baz} segments. For example, I have
-a filename "foo" and I want to match it with the pattern "{foo,bar}". Somehow
-the segment pattern becomes "*/foo" and doesn't match the string. Where does
-the '/' get tacked on? I don't even know how to explain this, but the short
-story was that ckmatch(), under certain circumstances, would back up to before
-the beginning of the filename string, which just happened to contain a "/"
-(and before that a ".") because of who was calling it. Obviously this is not
-how to write a pattern matching function... Ensuring that it never backs up
-beyond the beginning of a string fixed the immediate problem and does not seem
-to have broken any other matching scenarios (I have 150 of them in my test
-script). ckclib.c, 11 Sep 2002.
-
-There's still a problem though. Suppose the a client sends "dir {{.*,*}}" to
-a server. This asks for a directory listing of all files that begin with
-dot as well as all files. Still doesn't work because we don't normally show
-dot-files, but in this case it SHOULD work because ".*" was explicitly
-requested. Staring at the ckmatch() code revealed how to fix this, and I did,
-but that was only half the problem. The other half was that the list of
-files being fed to ckmatch() did not include the dotfiles in the first place.
-The cure here is to change nzxpand() to prescan the pattern to see if it
-includes a leading dot, and if so to set the "xmatchdot" flag itself, even
-if it wasn't set by the caller. ckclib.c, ckufio.c, 11 Sep 2002.
-
-Now that {foo,bar,...} patterns work better, I added a quick hack to the
-DIRECTORY command to allow multiple filespecs to be given, in which case we
-combine them into a {file1,file2,...} pattern before calling nzxpand(). Works
-fine but it's a hack because you don't get file lists upon "?" in the second
-and subsequent filespec fields, but I doubt anyone will notice. So now,
-finally, people can do "dir .* *" like they do in Unix (except with ls) to get
-a listing of all files in a directory without having to know about or use the
-/DOTFILES switch. This was NOT done for the server end of RDIR because of
-ambiguity of spaces as separators versus filename characters.) domydir():
-ckuus6.c, ckuus[r2].c, 11 Sep 2002.
-
-Added a CONTINUE command. In a script, this does whatever CONTINUE did before
-(e.g. in a FOR or WHILE loop). At the prompt, it calls popclvl(), which gives
-a more natural way to continue a script that has "shelled out" to the prompt.
-ckuusr.[ch], 11 Sep 2002.
-
-Added help text for CONTINUE. ckuus2.c, 12 Sep 2002.
-
-From Jeff, 16 Sep 2002:
- . SET TERM ROLL KEYSTROKES for K95: ckuusr.h, ckuus7.c
- . Remove the doexit() call from the Telnet TELOPT_LOGOUT handler: ckctel.c
-
-Fixed an FTP debug message to be consistent with Kermit ones.
-ckcftp.c, 16 Sep 2002.
-
-Added SET/SHOW TRANSFER REPORT to turn the post-transfer report off and on.
-ckuusr.h, ckuus[234].c, 16 Sep 2002.
-
-Fixed Solaris (and maybe some other SVORPOSIX builds) to find out their full
-hostname rather than just short form (e.g. watsol.cc.columbia.edu rather than
-just watsol). ckhost(): ckuusx.c, 16 Sep 2002.
-
-"cat somefile | kermit -Ts -" is supposed to send stdin in text mode, but
-K95's file transfer display reports BINARY. Looked at C-Kermit code; it seems
-fine. Looked at packet and debug logs; C-Kermit was indeed sending in text
-mode and announcing it correctly. K95 gattr() is doing the right thing:
-
- gattr file type[AMJ]=3
- gattr attribute A=text=0
- gattr sets tcharset TC_TRANSP[A]
-
-Same thing happens when C-Kermit is receiving. Yet when I send an actual
-file, rather than stdin, it's received in text mode. The only difference is
-that stdin does not have a Length attribute in its A-packet, so in this case
-the receiver skips any calls to screen() that show the length or percent done.
-Aha, so maybe it's just a display problem -- scrft() is not being called to
-repaint the file type if the size was not known. Fixed in opena() by
-removing the IF clause from "if (fsize > -1L) xxscreen(SCR_FS,0,fsize,"");".
-ckcfn3.c, 18 Sep 2002.
-
-K95 user has a listfile containing some regular filenames and then some
-filenames that include paths and has all kinds of problems with MGET /LISTFILE
-(pieces of different names concatenated to each other, etc). Setting up the
-same scenario here, I don't see the same problems but I do see "Refused: Name"
-when we go to get a path/name file. This happens because (a) we had already
-got a top-level file with a certain name, (b) a file in a subdirectory has the
-same name, (c) we are stripping the path before calling zchki(), and (d)
-FTP COLLISION is set to DISCARD. How do we make FTP not strip the path?
-
-This is an interesting question... The answer depends on where the user
-wants the file to go. Normally if you tell an FTP client to "get foo/bar",
-you want the file "bar" to be downloaded to the current directory.
-
-Anyway, it turns out the FTP module uses paths locally during MGET only if
-/RECURSIVE was specified. So:
-
- mget /listfile:blah /recursive
-
-should have made this work, but it didn't because in the /LISTFILE case,
-we have effectively turned an MGET into a series of GETs, where the code to
-check whether to strip the path didn't check the recursive flag because how
-could a GET (as opposed to an MGET) be recursive? Adding this exception to
-the if-condition got us a bit farther but now when we try to open the output
-file in doftprecv2(), zopeno() fails because the name contains a dirsep.
-We have to call zmkdir() first but that wasn't happening because some other
-flag wasn't set right in this case. Finally zmkdir was called, but with
-the wrong string. After fixing that, it works. Now we should be able
-to use /RECURSIVE to force the pathname to be used on the local end.
-ckcftp.c, 19 Sep 2002.
-
-Checked FTP filename conversion issues. FTP FILENAMES AUTO is supposed to
-mean LITERAL if "wearealike" OR server is UNIX or Windows, otherwise
-CONVERTED, but there were places where this rule was not applied consistently,
-fixed now. ckcftp.c, 21 Sep 2002.
-
-Added SET FTP DISPLAY, which is like SET TRANSFER DISPLAY but applies only to
-FTP, mainly because I tended to type it all the time. Now if you have dual
-sessions, each session can have its own transfer display style. ckcftp.c,
-ckuusr.h, ckuus[347].c, 21 Sep 2002.
-
-Back to FTP MLSD. We're supposed to match the pattern locally, not rely on
-the server to filter its list according to the client's pattern. Thus we must
-also allow an empty argument to MGET and must not send a filespec with MLSD.
-Actually this is tricky -- how is the client supposed to know whether to send
-a filespec. For example, if the user's command is "mget foo*bar", and the
-server supports MLSD, then what should the client do? The client does not
-know the wildcard syntax on the server, so for all the client knows, this
-might be a valid directory name, in which case it should be sent. On the
-other hand, the user might intend it as a wildcard, in which case it should
-NOT be sent. But the FTP client can't read the user's mind. This is another
-serious flaw in the Elz/Hethmon draft. Anyway, I got the local matching
-business working for MLSD as long as the user's MGET arg is really a pattern
-and not a directory name. To be continued... ckcftp.c, 21 Sep 2002.
-
-Added FTP { ENABLE, DISABLE } { FEAT, MLST }. If we always send FEAT, we
-usually get a complaint. If we send FEAT and MLST is negotiated, there is a
-good chance it is misimplemented or will have undesirable side effects, such
-as sending huge file lists. NOTE: /NOINIT on the FTP OPEN command also
-disables both of these. ckcftp.c, 22 Sep 2002.
-
-Fixed mkstemp() code in FTP remote_files(). mktemp() does not open the file,
-mkstemp() does open it; previously we had been opening it again and never
-closing the first instance so every MGET would create another open file
-descriptor. ckcftp.c, 22 Sep 2002.
-
-Added debug messages for temp-file creation and lines read from the temp file.
-ckcftp.c, 22 Sep 2002.
-
-Eliminated sending of some extraneous TYPE commands, but there's still room
-for improvement. ckcftp.c, 22 Sep 2002.
-
-Moved definition of build date to top of ckcmai.c. 22 Sep 2002.
-
-Added recursion to MGET with MLSD... It's all done in remote_files().
-Temp-file pointers are on a stack (max size 128). When parsing MLSD lines
-from the temp file and we see "type=dir", we create the local directory by
-calling zmkdir(), change to the remote by sending CWD, increment the depth,
-and call ourselves. When reading from a temp file, upon EOF we close and
-dispose of the temp file, return -3 if currently at top level, otherwise we
-free the tmpfile name, decrement the depth, send CDUP to the server, "cd .."
-locally, and go back and read the next line from the previous but now current
-temp file. Conceptually simple but needed hours of debugging -- what must
-be static, what must be on the stack... Seems OK now but still needs some
-heavy testing. ckcftp.c, 22 Sep 2002.
-
-Added FTP { ENABLE, DISABLE } { SIZE, MDTM } and add help text for FTP
-ENABLE and DISABLE. ckcftp.c, 23 Sep 2002.
-
-Don't allow restart if SIZE disabled. ckcftp.c, 23 Sep 2002.
-
-Make sure all implicit SIZE commands are surpressed if SIZE disabled.
-ckcftp.c, 23 Sep 2002.
-
-If an explicit FTP MODTIME command is sent when MDTM is DISABLED, and it
-succeeds, re-ENABLE MDTM. Ditto for SIZE. ckcftp.c, 23 Sep 2002.
-
-If an explicit FTP FEATURES command is sent during an FTP session, redo the
-features database from it. ckcftp.c, 23 Sep 2002.
-
-After further discussion with Robert Elz, I realized I had to expose the
-underlying MGET mechanisms to the user; the draft isn't going to change, and
-the new spec will result in undesirable effects if the client tries to "do the
-right thing" by magic in all situations; thus the user must have some new
-controls:
-
- MGET [ /MLST, /NLST, /MATCH:xxx ] [ filespec [ filespec [ ... ] ] ]
-
-These switches let the user force the use of MLSD or NLST when there's a
-choice, and to force local use of a pattern rather than sending it to the
-server, and even to send a directory name to the server at the same time as
-specifying a pattern for local matching, and of course by default we try to do
-the right thing in all scenarios. Symbols only; not coded yet. ckuusr.h,
-23 Sep 2002.
-
-Added the three new switches to MGET, plus /MLST is an invisible synonym for
-/MLSD. If /NLST or /MLSD is given it, it forces the corresponding FTP protocol
-directive. ckcftp.c, 25 Sep 2002.
-
-Now for the tricky part: now we have two separate concepts for what to send to
-the server: a filename or wildcard to be interpreted by the server (NLST only)
-or a directory from which to get a list of all the files (NLST or MLSD),
-possibly together with a pattern to be used by the client to match filenames
-returned by the server. This required giving remote_files() an additional
-argument. Now it uses "pattern" (if any) strictly for local pattern matching
-(because now it is the /MATCH: switch argument, not the MGET filespec), and
-"arg" (the MGET filespec) is what it sends to the server, maybe (see the
-comments in the code for the actual details); either or both these can be
-null. ckcftp.c, 25 Sep 2002.
-
-Discovered that "mget foo", where foo is a directory name, never worked.
-Fixed in remote_files(): ckcftp.c, 25 Sep 2002.
-
-Going through every combination of NLST, MLSD, /MATCH:, and MGET arg and
-debugging each case until OK... Then also with the panix.com NetBSD server
-(lukemftpd 1.0) which also supports MLSD.... 11 test cases all debugged and
-tested OK. ckcftp.c, 26 Sep 2002.
-
-Added /NODOTFILES switch to FTP MGET, to control what happens with dot-files
-if the server includes their names in the list (as lukemftpd does). There's
-no point in adding a /DOTFILES switch because what could it possibly do?
-ckcftp.c, 26 Sep 2002.
-
-Changed a bunch of "skipthis++" to "continue" in doftpget(), to avoid
-error messages when skipping files that user said she wanted to skip.
-ckcftp.c, 26 Sep 2002.
-
-Added help text for the new MGET switches. ckcftp.c, 26 Sep 2002.
-
-Don't switch LOCUS when making an FTP connection until logged in.
-ckcftp.c, 26 Sep 2002.
-
-Fixed LDIR to run Kermit's built-in DIRECTORY code rather than the external
-directory program. ckuusr.c, 26 Sep 2002.
-
-Protect iswild() against NULL args. ckufio.c, 26 Sep 2002.
-
-From Jeff: SET GUI WINDOW RUN-MODE { MAXIMIZE, MINIMIZE, RESTORE },
-plus variables for GUI Window X position, GUI Window Y position, GUI
-Window X resolution, GUI Window Y resolution, GUI Window Run mode.
-ckuusr.h, ckuus[24].c, 27 Sep 2002.
-
-From Ronan Flood: updated FreeBSD 1.0 makefile entry, plus an #ifdef to protect
-sysconf() calls. makefile, ckutio.c, 28 Sep 2002.
-
-Change ftp_auth() to return(0) if an AUTH command gets a 500 response, so it
-doesn't keep sending other kinds of AUTH commands. ckcftp.c, 29 Sep 2002.
-
-Changes from Jeff to yesterday's changes. ckcftp.c, 30 Sep 2002.
-
-From Jeff: SSH command-line personality. Uses same command line as the Telnet
-personality. ckcker.h, ckcmai.c, ckuus[4y].c, 3 Oct 2002.
-
-From Jeff, 7 Oct 2002:
- . SET PRINTER CHARACTER-SET. ckuxla.c, ckuusr.h, ckuus[25].c
- . Promotion of K95 to Beta.01. ckcmai.c
- . Promotion of SET GUI { MENUBAR, TOOLBAR } to visible. ckuus3.c
-
-Changed the URL parser as follows: if the username and/or password fields are
-present but empty, as in:
-
- ftp://@ftp.xyzcorp.com/somepath
- or: ftp://:@ftp.xyzcorp.com/somepath
- but not: ftp://:ftp.xyzcorp.com/somepath
-
-the pointer for these items becomes a pointer to an empty string, rather than
-a NULL pointer. Then when we go to open the connection, if the username
-string pointer points to an empty string, we prompt for the username (and/or
-password). ckuusy.c 9 Oct 2002.
-
-Jason Heskett reported an interesting bug involving a core dump when an
-ON_EXIT macro is defined that executes another macro. Sometimes. He was able
-to send a short command file that always crashed. Diagnosis: ON_EXIT, when it
-is called, pokes itself out of the macro table by setting its own entry in the
-macro name list to an empty string. But this interferes with any macro
-lookups that are done while executing ON_EXIT's body and also evidently some
-code is not happy with empty macro names... To fix: replace "on_exit" with
-"on_exxx", so the replacement keyword is (a) nonempty, and (b) doesn't wreck
-the alphabetical sorting of the table. ckuusx.c, 9 Oct 2002.
-
-Added makefile targets for FreeBSD 4.6 and 5.0. Built and tested on 4.6;
-don't know about 5.0. ckuver.h, makefile, 9 Oct 2002.
-
-Added targets for AIX 5.2 and 5.3; totally untested. ckuver.h, makefile,
-9 Oct 2002.
-
-Built current source on Unixware 7.1.3 (make uw7); it's fine. 9 Oct 2002.
-
-Promoted C-Kermit to 8.0.206 Beta.01 in hopes of a simultaneous release
-with K95 2.1. ckcmai.c, 9 Oct 2002.
-
-From Jeff: Change KERMITFONT definitions to use the new (Unicode 3.1) code
-points for the terminal graphics characters (such as VT100 horizontal scan
-lines), rather than private-use codes. ckcuni.c, 10 Oct 2002.
-
-Jason Heskett also complained that REMOTE CD would print the name of the new
-directory returned by the server even if he SET QUIET ON. This is a tricky
-one. Which server replies should the QUIET settings apply to? If I give a
-REMOTE DIRECTORY command, it means I want to see the directory listing,
-period. But if I give a REMOTE CD command, I get an "unsolicited" response
-message that SET QUIET ON should suppress. Adding message suppression to
-rcv_shortreply() is close, but not totally right; for example, it also
-suppresses the response to REMOTE PWD, which is not helpful. The only right
-way to do this is to suppress for REMOTE CD only, which can be done only by
-setting a (new) global flag, rcdactive. ckuus[r57].c, ckcpro.w, 10 Oct 2002.
-
-Ditto for REMOTE LOGIN response message ("Logged in"). ckuus7.c, 11 Oct 2002.
-
-From Jeff: SET GUI WINDOW FONT { NAME, SIZE }. ckuusr.h, ckuus4.c, 11 Oct 2002.
-
-Quick preliminary 8.0.206 build-all:
-
- OK SunOS 4.1.3
- OK Solaris 2.5.1
- OK Solaris 9
- OK AIX 4.3.3
- OK HP-UX 10.20
- OK VMS 7.1 Alpha + TCP/IP
- OK VMS 7.1 Alpha nonet
- OK VMS 5.5 VAX + TCP/IP
- OK VMS 5.5 VAX nonet
- OK Unixware 7.1.3
- OK FreeBSD 3.1
- OK FreeBSD 4.6
- OK NetBSD 1.5.2 MVME (Gerry B)
- OK Sinix 5.42
-
-Sinix build got stuck on ckuusr.c even though we're not optimizing on Sinix
-any more. Rebooting the machine fixed it.
-
-Fixed some #ifdefs for VMS in new incomplete-file deletion code in doclean().
-ckuusx.c, 11 Oct 2002.
-
-Moved uq_blah() prototypes from ckuusr.h to ckcker.h because these routines
-are called in modules that don't (and shouldn't have to) include ckuusr.h.
-11 Oct 2002.
-
-Jeff verified secure builds on Linux and Solaris.
-
-Custom-build workout: 80 different feature-selection combinations:
- . Fixed yesterday's change for NOSPL: ckcfns.c.
- . Fixed conflict between NORECALL and USE_ARROWKEYS: ckucmd.c.
- . Moved setseslog() from ckuus5.c to ckuusx.c to avoid link-time foulups.
- . Fixed an unguarded reference to zmkdir() in ckcftp.c.
- . Protected rmsg() by #ifndef NOXFER: ckuus7.c.
- . Protected initxlist() by #ifndef NOXFER: ckcmai.c.
- . Fixed unguarded references to g_url struct in xx_ftp(): ckuusy.c.
- . Fixed unguarded references to tt_snaws() in winchh(): ckutio.c.
-
---- 8.0.206 Beta.01 11 Oct 2002 ---
-
-From Jeff, 16 Oct 2002:
- . Fix K95 RMDIR: ckcfn3.c.
- . Makefile targets for Red Hat 7.2, 7.3, 8.0: ckuver.h, makefile.
- . Added \v(log_xxx) for each kind of log for PeterE: ckuusr.h, ckuus4.c.
- . Added SET TERM ATTRIBUTE DIM { ON, OFF }: ckuus[27].c.
- . Change "const" to "CONST" in some PAM declarations. ckufio.c.
-
-Added SET MATCH { DOTFILE, FIFO } { ON, OFF }. A FIFO special file is a named
-pipe, used for interprocess communication. It must be opened at both ends, so
-it's silly to match them by default; opening a FIFO and attempting to read
-will block forever unless somebody is writing into the other end. Made the
-MATCH FIFO default OFF in all cases. The dotfile default is the same as
-always (OFF for UNIX, ON elsewhere); SET MATCH DOTFILE is simply a more
-untuitive and findable command than SET WILD KERMIT /MATCH-DOT-FILES. Note
-that SET MATCH DOTFILE undoes SET OPTIONS DIRECTORY /[NO]DOTFILES, and vice
-versa. ckcmai.c, ckuusr.h, ckuus[23].c, ckufio.c. 17 Oct 2002.
-
-Added client and server end of REMOTE SET MATCH { DOTFILE, FIFO } { ON, OFF }.
-The new protocol codes are 330 and 331, respectively. ckuus[367].c, ckcfns.c,
-17 Oct 2002.
-
-Adjusted the "match dot if pattern starts with dot" heuristic in nzxpand()
-to not kick in if the filespec is "./foo". This probably needs more work.
-ckufio.c, 17 Oct 2002.
-
-Fixed typo in transcribing Jeff's ckcfn3.c code from yesterday. 18 Oct 2002.
-
-Moved some help text out of #ifdef ANYSSH that had nothing to do with SSH.
-(Idea for a new EMACS feature: M-X list-ifdef-environment.)
-ckuus2.c, 18 Oct 2002.
-
-Removed "set file { permission, protection }" keywords, which led nowhere.
-ckuus7.c, 18 Oct 2002.
-
-Added -DSV68 to all SV/68 targets. Make ckgetfqhostname() just return its
-argument in SV/68; it dumps core otherwise. In case this happens anywhere
-else, add -DNOCKGETFQHOST to CFLAGS. makefile, ckcnet.c, 18 Oct 2002.
-
-For PeterE, added SET { SEND, RECEIVE } PERMISSIONS { ON, OFF } so incoming and
-outbound permission attributes can be set separately. ckuus[27].c, 18 Oct 2002.
-
-Changed SHOW ATTRIBUTES to show In and Out permissions separately.
-ckuus5.c, 18 Oct 2002.
-
-Fixed REDO to display the command it's redoing and to add it to the bottom
-of the recall buffer. ckuusr.c, 18 Oct 2002.
-
-Discovered that DATE SATURDAY dumps core... Apparently it always did; this
-case was not included in the date-time torture test script. The crash happens
-because the DATE parsing code doesn't check for a NULL date-converion
-error-message pointer. Fixed in ckuusr.c, 18 Oct 2002.
-
-The reason DATE SATURDAY got a date-conversion error was that this path thru
-the code left a result pointer unset. Fixed in cmcvtdate(): ckucmd.c,
-19 Oct 2002.
-
-DATE SUNDAY +1DAY returned incorrect results (for any day-of-week name, any
-delta time), even though DATE TODAY +1DAY worked fine. Fixed in cmcvtdate():
-ckucmd.c, 19 Oct 2002.
-
-SET TAKE ECHO ON counted each line twice when GOTO was active. Fixed in
-dogoto(): ckuus6.c, 19 Oct 2002.
-
-Jeff noticed:
-"KERMIT READY TO GET...
- RCVD: (2 files) Last: [/amd/prost/p/kd/jaltman/.src/ckonet.c] (OK)
-the last file attempted may have been ckonet.c but it certainly was
-not the last file received" (similarly for sending). Fixed by having two
-pointers for each name; a preliminary pointer, which is set for each file at
-the beginning of the transfer (when we have all the needed info), and a final
-one that is set from the preliminary one only after the file was transferred
-successfully. This corrects not only the automatic "wheremessage" at the end
-of a remote-mode transfer, but also the WHERE and SHOW FILE command results.
-ckuusx.c, ckcfn[s3].c, ckcpro.w, 19 Oct 2002.
-
-From Jeff: Improve ORIENTATION message for K95 to say which directories are
-for which INI files. ckuusr.c, 23 Oct 2002.
-
-Removed Beta designation from herald. ckcmai.c, 23 Oct 2002.
-
-Put final dates and ID strings in Unix and VMS build procedures.
-Makefile, ckvker.com, 23 Oct 2002.
-
-Build-all... #ifdef adjustments: ckcfns.c... 83 different feature-set
-combinations build OK on Linux. 23 Oct 2002.
-
-From Jeff: SET WIN95 HORIZONTAL-SCAN-LINE-SUBSTITUTIONS. ckuusr.h, ckuus7.c,
-24 Oct 2002.
-
-Fixed Heath-19 graphic character-set table to use new Unicode 3.1 values
-if WIN95 HORIZ OFF. ckcuni.c, 24 Oct 2002.
-
-Changed tx_usub() to return Unicode 3.1 values if WIN95 HORIZ OFF.
-ckcuni.c, 24 Oct 2002. <-- No backed off on this.
-
-Some problems during build-all:
-
- . VMS 7.1 TGV 4.2: If I make a Telnet connection with it, then try to send
- a file (itself. wermit.exe) over the connection, the connection drops
- after about 20%, the thermometer zooms out to 100% and SUCCESS is reported.
- This doesn't happen with UCX.
-
- . VMS 7.3 TGV 4.3: ckcmai.c won't compile because of a complaint about the
- declaration of select() (which ckcmai.c doesn't use) in
- SYS$COMMON:[SYSLIB]DECC$RTLDEF.TLB. Ditto in VMS 7.2 TGV 4.3.
- Adding NOSELECT to CFLAGS doesn't help. I don't think the VMS version
- even uses select(). But the TGV 4.3 builds were OK in 8.0.201, so what
- changed? I don't see anything in ckcnet.h that would have done it.
-
-It builds OK with VMS 7.1 / TGV 4.2 but sending files on Telnet connections
-fails in a strange way: the connection drops, but the thermomoter goes to 100%
-and success is reported. I don't know why the connection is dropping (s_errno
-is 32 == "broken pipe"), but the spurious success indication is because of
-a double failure in sdata(): (1) The packet-sending loop index could go
-negative without breaking the loop when streaming; (2) if spack() fails,
-sdata() should return -2, not -1 (which means EOF). Also if any ttchk() in
-sdata() returns < 0, sdata should return -2. I fixed this code (which has
-been this way for YEARS) and now VMS C-Kermit properly fails when it gets
-the spack() error, but ttchk() in this case still doesn't think the connection
-is lost, but that must be our new problem with MultiNet. ckcfns.c,
-27 Oct 2002.
-
-The compilation failure in ckcmai.c is a clue... The problem was that I added
-#ifdef VMS / #include <time.h> / #endif to shut up complaints about the time()
-call. Evidently something in VMS <time.h> gives MultiNet a bad case of
-indigestion; removing it fixes the compilation and the result works fine. The
-transmission failures in the other case seem to be a coincidence -- something
-to do with the U of Arizona (probably some obscure VMS quota on my IDs there,
-or some kind of network connection throttling), since it doesn't happen
-anywhere else. ckcmai.c, 27 Oct 2002.
-
-Changed four occurrences of "void" to "VOID" in ckcftp.c, 27 Oct 2002.
-
-Defined NOCKFQHOSTNAME for HPUXPRE65. Might also need this for HP-UX 7
-and maybe 8. ckcnet.c, 27 Oct 2002.
-
-From Jeff: PAM_CONST definition to clear up warnings caused by different
-vendors' definitions of PAM structs. ckufio.c, 28 Oct 2002.
-
-Unixware 2.1.0 build bombs immediately with "UX:make: ERROR: line too long"
-(which line?) Not worth chopping up the makefile to fix but in a pinch it
-could be done. 2.1.3 builds OK.
-
-Did another 20-some platform builds, bringing the total to 83, plus a final
-runthrough of the build-with-84-different-feature-set-combinations script on
-Linux. Should be good to go!
-
---- 8.0.206 24 Oct 2002 ---
-
-Finally got access to Linux on IA64 again. Builds OK but dumps core
-immediately on startup. Adding -DNOCKGETFQHOST was necessary but not
-sufficient. In this case, the very call to ckgetfqhostname() from ckhost()
-(which is in ckuusx.c) was dumping core; thus I had to move the definition of
-NOCKGETFQHOST from ckcnet.c to ckcdeb.h, add an #ifdef __ia64__ clause to it,
-and protect the call to ckgetfqhostname() with it. Obviously there has to be
-a better fix but this will have to for now. ckcnet.c, ckuusx.c, ckcdeb.h,
-31 Oct 2002.
-
-Link step fails in Mandrake 9.0 with undefined references to res_search,
-dn_expand, and crypt. Turns out the linux makefile target tests for the
-existence of libcrypt.a and libresolv.a, but in Mandrake 9.0 they exist
-only as *.so. Changed linux target to look for both. makefile, 1 Nov 2002.
-
-Vace reported that "ftp mget a b c" would get ALL files from the server's
-directory if c did not exist. Diagnosis: off-by-one error in counting MGET
-args processed. Naturally fixing this bug revealed another (this time
-cosmetic) one, which resulted in spurious error messages when hitting MGET
-args that have no match on the server. Fixed in ckcftp.c, 1 Nov 2002.
-
-Rebuilt about 60 of the most important Unix binaries to pick up the fixes
-31 Oct - 1 Nov 2002, and refreshed the FTP site with new sources, tarballs,
-ZIP files, etc. Sat Nov 2 19:11:30 2002
-
-From Martin Vorlaender and Jeff, SSL/TLS support for VMS:
-ckuusr.h, ckuath.h, ckcnet.c, ckctel.c, ckuath.c, 10 Nov 2002.
-
-Added PASV as invisible synonym for PASSIVE. ckcftp.c, 10 Nov 2002.
-
---- 8.0.206 24 Oct 2002 #2 ---
-
-More work on SSL in VMS: Jeff + Martin Vorlaender: ck_ssl.c ckcmai.c ckcnet.c
-ckctel.c ckuath.h ckvcon.c ckvtio.c ckvker.com 10-15 Nov 2002.
-
-Discovered that ckvfio.c would not compile on VMS 6.1 with UCX 4.1 because
-<conv$routines.h> was missing, which is explicitly included. Enclosed the
-#include in #ifdef NOCONVROUTINES..#endif and rebuilt with
-@[users.fdc.src]ckvker.com "" "" "NOCONVROUTINES". 16 Nov 2002.
-
-Fixed the "ftp mget */data/*" problem with two small changes to doftpget():
-ckcftp.c, 16 Nov 2002. Placed a copy of ckcftp.patch in ~kermit/f.
-
-From Lucas Hart: Fixes for VAX C 2.x and CMU TCP/IP. "Can't guarantee that
-the revised CKVOLD will work for all combinations of more recent
-VMS/compiler/TCPIP releases, but I've tested it for compatibility on our AXP
-VMS 6.2, UCX 4.0, DECC 5.6, your AXP VMS 7.1, DEC TCPIP 5.1, DECC 6.0 as well
-as with VAX VMS 5.4, VAX C 3.2, CMU12 and VAX VMS 4.7, VAX C 2.4." ckvfio.c,
-ckvtio.c, ckuus5.c, ckvker.com, ckvold.com, 17 Nov 2002.
-
-From Jeff: More work on VMS SSL. Now it actually works, even in CONNECT mode,
-except it hangs when it gets an error alert or the remote closes the
-connection. ckcnet.c. ckvtio.c, 17 Nov 2002.
-
-NOTE: Lucas's changes should go into the 8.0.206 source code but it's too
-late since ckvtio.c (upon which he based his changes) is already full of
-SSL code.
-
-MGET in K95 in totally broken FOR SOME PEOPLE (mainly me) if the TMP (or TEMP)
-value is too long. It works fine if you set these to C:\TMP. Diagnosis: (1)
-we were malloc'ing only 16 bytes for the temp file name (I think this was my
-fault -- I was only looking at the "ckXXXXXX" part and forgetting that this
-was appended to the TMP path); (2) the Windows version of mktemp() wants you
-to use the value pointed to by the pointer it returns, rather than assuming
-the mktemp() arg will be modified in place. The code was changed to malloc a
-longer string and to use the return value from mktemp() (if any) rather than
-assuming that mktemp() modified its argument string (in K95 only -- not sure
-about Unix platforms; the man pages differ on this, but at least this way if
-some mktemp() version does NOT alter its argument, we still have a usable
-filename (like /tmp/ckXXXXXX)). Of course this won't be good for recursive
-MLSD downloads, but we can always issue patches for the Unix version later if
-needed. The Linux and BSD versions use mkstemp() anyway. There is, however,
-a danger of a memory leak in the Unix version if the user has defined a TMPDIR
-or CK_TMP environment variable whose value is longer than 9 bytes. All this
-is highly unlikely so we should be OK. ckcftp.c, 17 Nov 2002.
-
---- K95 2.1.1 and updated ck[uv]206.{tar,zip} but not C-Kermit binaries ---
-
-From Jeff: Fixes for Telnet Com Port Control, update to a newer release of
-OpenSSL: ck_ssl.c ck_ssl.h ckcdeb.h ckcftp.c ckcmai.c ckcnet.c ckctel.c
-ckuath.c ckuath.h ckucns.c ckuus4.c ckuus5.c ckuusr.c ckuusr.h ckvcon.c
-ckvfio.c ckvker.com ckvtio.c ckvvms.h, 25 Nov 2002.
-
---- K95 2.1.2 and C-Kermit 8.0 CDROM ---
-
-From Jeff, 28 Nov 2002:
- . Updated SSL modules: ck_ssl.[ch].
- . Fixed cipher-list display in SHOW AUTH & FTP ssl_auth(): ckuus7.c. ckcftp.c
- . Some minor tn_wait() fixes: ckctel.c.
- . Preliminary SSL support for VMS CONNECT: ckvcon.c.
-
-Bumped C-Kermit edit number to 207.
-
-From Jeff, 29 Nov 2002: "[C-Kermit was dumping core on SCO OSR5 Telnet Com Port
-connections because] the SCO compiler treats all characters as signed. This
-was causing 'sprintf(buf,"02x ",ch);' to produce strings such as "ffffffc2"
-instead of "c2" for values between 128 and 255. This wrote beyond the end of
-a buffer and blew away the stack. Having fixed this I also noticed that
-conect() did not properly check for carrier when TN CPC was negotiated. This
-has now been fixed as well." ckucns.c, ckucon.c, ckctel.c, 29 Nov 2002.
-
-From Jeff, 30 Nov 2002: Fix SSL for VMS and also carry forward the CPC fixes
-to VMS. ckcnet.c, ckvtio.c, ckvcon.c, 30 Nov 2002.
-
-Changed copyright dates that are displayed (but not yet all the internal
-ones) from 2002 to 2003. ckcmai.c, 3 Jan 2003.
-
-Fixed the FTP module's brief-format transaction log, which had the status
-inverted: OK for FAILED and v.v. ckcftp.c 3 Jan 2003.
-
-From Jeff, 4 Jan 2003:
- . Make /MOVE-TO:xxx convert xxx to full pathname: ckuus[r67].c,
- . Make SHOW OPTIONS ALL show both kinds of options: ckuus2.c.
- . More command-line personalities: ckcmai.c, ckuusy.c.
- . New NOSCROLL command for K95: ckuusr.[ch], ckuus2.c.
- . New lockdown and other command-line options: ckuusr.h, ckuusy.c.
- . SSL interface updated to OpenSSL 0.9.7: ck_ssl.c.
- . SET TERM LINE-SPACING and CURSOR xxx NOBLINK: ckuus[27]c.
- . Expanded SHOW GUI command: ckuus3.c
- . New SHOW TABS code: ckuus5.c.
-
-Updated SUPPORT (BUG), NEWS, and INTRO texts. ckuus[26].c. 5 Jan 2003.
-
-Fixed FTP module to suppress "'FEAT': Command not understood" message
-unless FTP DEBUG is ON. ckcftp.c, 6 Jan 2003.
-
-Got a report that C-Kermit dumps core on Solaris when executing a certain
-script. Seems to be related to changing vnambuf[] in zzstring() from an
-automatic array to a malloc'd buffer (see notes from 29 Jun 2000). Changed
-it to an automatic buffer except for K95. ckuus4.c, 6 Jan 2003.
-
-Nope, that's not it. It evidently happens only after FTP PUT has been used.
-Fixed solaris9g makefile target to include -funsigned-char and built a new
-binary. Determined that building with gcc and -funsigned-char makes no
-difference. makefile, 7 Jan 2003.
-
-I did a preliminary audit, looking at the items in the left column: if used in
-a given routine, are there any obvious mistakes:
-
- 1 2 3 4 5
- doftpput->putfile->sendrequest->doftpsend2->secure_write
-malloc OK OK OK OK OK
-makestr OK OK OK OK OK
-automatic arrays OK OK OK OK OK
-[ck]str[n]cpy OK OK OK OK OK
-[ck]str[n]cat OK OK OK OK OK
-sprintf OK OK OK OK OK
-nzltor OK OK OK OK OK
-zfnqfp OK OK OK OK OK
-memcpy OK OK OK OK OK
-bcopy OK OK OK OK OK
-
-secure_write sends the data directly on clear-text connections. On secure
-connections, it calls secure_putbuf(), which calls secure_putbyte(), but we
-aren't using those, so secure_write() is the end of the call chain for FTP
-PUT. doftpsend2 has buf[] as an automatic array, which it reads file data
-into using zxin (binary mode only), but this looks OK. Still, I changed it
-read 1 less than the buffer size (fread) just in case. Also there was one
-debug() statement that referred to an automatic array (fullname[]) before it
-was initialized (but not used in this case), which I fixed. ckcftp.c,
-7 Jan 2003.
-
-FTP GET /RECURSIVE somepath/somefile still didn't work, despite what the
-notes of 19 Sep 2001 say. There are so many paths through the code,
-depending on switch values, GET vs MGET, etc, that a crucial spot was missed.
-Fixed in doftpget(): ckcftp.c, 7 Jan 2003.
-
-Back to the core dump... after two days of full-time debugging, I found the
-culprit: the buffer-full test in the zzout() macro should have been ">="
-rather than just ">", thus Kermit wrote 1 byte past the end of the malloc'd
-FTP PUT output buffer, ucbuf. Why did it never happen in K95? Because, since
-it's a secure build, FUDGE_FACTOR is defined there. But it's not defined in
-Solaris or other clear-text builds. Although the crash wouldn't happen in
-secure builds, the 1-byte leak might have caused errors in the data transfer.
-In non-Solaris clear-text builds, like Linux, I suspect that malloc() tends
-add something for safety (especially given the man page statement that it
-allocates "at least" what you asked for). Another reason the problem escaped
-notice is that zzout() is used only for text-mode PUTs (and then only when
-there is no character-set translation), but most transfers these days are
-binary and/or downloads. Anyway, in the course of debugging, a lot of small
-cleanups were done: sizeof(blah) for all arrays was replaced by the same
-symbolic size that was used to allocate the array, numeric array sizes were
-replaced with symbolic ones, etc. The real fix is one character long.
-ckcftp.c, 9 Jan 2003.
-
-Got a report that "mget /recursive */somedir/*" downloaded the files into
-the current directory, rather than re-creating the remote directory structure.
-Fixed in doftpget(): ckcftp.c, 10 Jan 2003.
-
-Unix C-Kermit did not allow file transfer if started under inetd and accessed
-via Internet raw socket (or whatever). Diagnosis: isatty() and friends would
-fail causing ttopen() to fail. Fixed by adding escape clauses for "-l 0"
-situations (i.e. Kermit invoked with an already-open file descriptor) at the
-appropriate places. ckcmai.c, ckutio.c, 14 Jan 2003.
-
-From Jeff for K95 2.1.3
- . Add test for startflags & 128 to trap() for ignoring BREAK.
- . Fix for SHOW TRANSMIT.
-
---- K95 2.1.3 ---
-
-FTP USER, FTP ACCOUNT, plus the various prompts and switches for FTP username,
-password, and account all neglected to strip quotes, and in most cases quotes
-are necessary to specify a username that contains spaces. ckcftp.c,
-15 Jan 2003.
-
-FTP MPUT f1 f2 f3... gets a parse error if any of the fn's do not match an
-existing file. This is bad for scripts. In doftpput(), cmfdb() looks for
-keywords (switches) or CMIFI. When it hits CMIFI, it exits from the initial
-parse loop and then does additional cmifi()s in a loop until done. The most
-obvious fix is to parse each field with cmfdb(CMIFI,CMFLD), i.e. fall back to
-CMFLD if CMIFI doesn't match anything. Then if CMFLD was used, we don't add
-the filespec to the list. This is a rather big change but it seems to work.
-No error messages or failures happen for non-matching fields, but an error
-message is printed (and the MPUT command fails) if none of the fields match
-any files. This fix got in too late for 2.1.3; workaround: use C-Shell
-like wildcard list (ftp mput "{*.abc,foo.*}"). ckcftp.c, 16 Jan 2003.
-
-GREP did not pass its pattern through the expander, thus variables could
-not be used for patterns. This must have been an oversight -- I can't find
-anything in my notes about it. Fixed in dogrep(): ckuus6.c, 24 Jan 2003.
-
-New makefile target for HP-UX 11.xx with OpenSSL from Tapani Tarvainen.
-makefile, 31 Jan 2003.
-
-From Jeff:
- . Avoid core dump when dereferencing tnc_get_signature(): ckuus4.c.
- . Bump version numbers to 8.0.208, 2.1.4: ckcmai.c.
-
-Added /NOLOGIN to FTP [OPEN]. ckcftp.c, 10 Feb 2003.
-
-Don't dump core if FTP DEBUG is ON and FTP OPEN does not include a service.
-openftp(): ckcftp.c, 10 Feb 2003.
-
-HELP PATTERN text incorrectly identified commands and functions with
-floating and anchored patterns. The corrected lists are:
-Floating: GREP, TYPE /MATCH:, /EXCEPT: patterns, \farraylook(),
-Anchored: IF MATCH, file-matching wildcards, \fsearch(), \frsearch()
-ckuus2.c, 10 Feb 2003.
-
-INPUT n \fpattern(xxx) did not work for case-independent comparisons.
-Fixed in doinput(): ckuus4.c, 10 Feb 2003.
-
-It seems \fpattern() didn't work with MINPUT at all. There was no code to
-handle \fpattern() in the MINPUT parse loop, so it never worked. The code
-had to be totally rewritten to use cmfld() in a loop, rather than cmtxt()
-and then cksplit(). Furthermore, whenever any of the fields was an
-\fjoin(), this had to be split. ckuusr.c, 10 Feb 2003.
-
-Macro replacement via \m() and \fdefinition() does not work as advertised
-(i.e. case sensitively) for associative array elements; e.g. \m(xxx<abc>) is
-treated the same as \m(xxx<ABC>), contrary to section 7.10.10 of the C-Kermit
-7.0 update notes, and to the fact that the two really do exist separately.
-Fixed by adding a static function isaarray(s) which succeeds if s is an
-associative array reference and fails otherwise, and then having \m()
-and \fdef() call mxxlook() (case-sensitive lookup) if isaarray(), otherwise
-(as before) mxlook()). ckuus4.c, 11 Feb 2003.
-
-Fixed FTP OPEN to allow the /USER switch to override SET FTP AUTOLOGIN OFF,
-just as /NOLOGIN overrides SET FTP AUTOLOGIN ON. ckcftp.c, 11 Feb 2003.
-
-In K95, "set key \1234 \27H" (any SET KEY command in which the first char of
-the definition was backslash, and the ONLY character after the backslash
-quantity was an uppercase letter, that letter would be lowercased). Diagnosis:
-xlookup() poking its argument (see notes from July 2000). Jeff sent a fix.
-ckucmd.c, 15 Feb 2003.
-
-Ran my S-Expression torture test to make sure Sexps still worked. They do,
-except the bitwise & and | operators were broken, e.g. (& 7 2) and (| 1 2 4)
-get "Invalid operand" errors. Jeff's code had added an early failure return
-from the lookup loop when when a single-byte keyword matched a keyword that
-started with the same byte but was more than one byte long. So "&" would hit
-"&&" and fail instead of continuing its search (xlookup tables aren't sorted
-so there can be no early return). Fixed in xlookup(): ckucmd.c, 16 Feb 2003.
-
-Got rid of "krbmit" target from makefile. It's still there, but we don't
-use it any more. All secure targets now use "xermit", and produce a binary
-called wermit, just like the regular ones do (except the old ckucon.c ones).
-Non-secure targets, since they don't define any of the security symbols,
-wind up compiling and linking to (mostly) empty security modules. makefile,
-15 Feb 2003.
-
-Added \fcvtdate(xxx,3) to format its result in MDTM format (yyyymmddhhmmss,
-all numeric, no spaces or punctuation). Of course these numeric strings
-are too big to be 32-bit numbers and are useless for arithmetic, but they're
-useful for lexical comparison, etc. ckuus[24].c, 16 Feb 2003.
-
-The following FTP commands did not set FAILURE when they failed: RMDIR,
-CD, CDUP, Fixed in the corresponding doftpblah() routines. ckcftp.c,
-16 Feb 2003.
-
-RENAME would sometimes not print an error message when it failed, e.g. in K95
-when the destination file already existed. ckuus6.c, 17 Feb 2003.
-
-Fixed COPY error messages, which did not come out in standard format when
-/LIST was not included. ckuus6.c, 17 Feb 2003.
-
-Fixed #ifdefs in ck_crp.c to allow nonsecure builds on old platforms like
-System V/68 R3. 19 Feb 2003.
-
-Similar treatment for ck_ssl.c. 20 Feb 2003.
-
-From Jeff, 21 Feb 2003:
- . AIX53 and AIX52 symbols for ckcdeb.h, makefile.
- . New gcc targets for various AIX 4.x/5.x versions: makefile.
- . Copyright date updates: ck_crp.c, ck_ssl.c.
- . ENABLE/DISABLE QUERY broken because keyword table out of order: ckuusr.c.
- . Fixed the use of HTTP proxies for HTTP [RE]OPEN for Unix: ckcnet.c.
-
-Also for K95 only: Allow file transfer when K95 is invoked on the remote end
-of a connection to a Pragma Systems Terminal Server connection; automatically
-SET EXIT HANGUP OFF when invoked with open port handle ("k95 -l nnnn").
-
-"cd a*" failed even when "a*" matched only one directory. Fixed in cmifi():
-ckucmd.c, 21 Feb 2003.
-
-In the Unix version, replace "extern int errno;" with "#include <errno.h>"
-if __GLIBC__ is defined, since glibc now defines a thread-specific errno.
-ckcdeb.h, 26 Feb 2003.
-
-Added #ifdefs to skip compilation of ckuath.c in nonsecure builds. Tested
-by building both secure and regular versions in Linux. ckuath.c, 26 Feb 2003.
-
-Ran the build-in-84-different-configurations script on Linux to make sure it
-still builds with all different combinations of feature selection options.
-All OK. 26 Feb 2003.
-
-Built on VMS. Needed to add a prototype for mxxlook*() to ckuusr.h; built
-OK otherwise. 26 Feb 2003.
-
-From Jeff: More #ifdef shuffling for nonsecure builds: ckuath.c, ck_ssl.c,
-27 Feb 2003.
-
-Added code to ensure \v(download) ends in a directory separator in Unix,
-Windows, and OS/2. ckuus7.c, 27 Feb 2003.
-
-Added code to K95 zfnqfp() to tack on directory separator when returning
-a directory name. ckofio.c, 27 Feb 2003.
-
-Somehow an old copy of ckuath.c popped to replace the new one. Put the new
-one back. 28 Feb 2003.
-
-From Jeff: Fix typo in my K95 zfnqfp() code from yesterday; fixes for handling
-UNCs uniformly, no matter which way their slashes are leaning. ckofio.c,
-28 Feb 2003.
-
-At Jeff Mezei's suggestion, separate text and binary mode open sequences
-for VMS session log. ckvfio.c, 28 Feb 2003.
-
-Added freebsd48 target for FreeBSD 4.8. makefile, 1 Mar 2003.
-
-Changed Mac OS X entries to include -DUSE_STRERROR. makefile, 2 Mar 2003.
-
-Fixed GETOK /GUI to evaluate its text argument. ckuus6.c, 3 Mar 2003.
-
-Jeff fixed the K95 Dialer QUICK dialog to (a) allow templates, and (b) have
-a Save-As option. 3 Mar 2003.
-
-Jeff fixed a problem with the Xmodem-CRC checksum being crunched whenever
-there was a retransmission. 7 Mar 2003.
-
-Added target/banner for Tru64 5.1B. makefile, ckuver.h, 5 Mar 2003.
-
-In Unix, the zcopy() routine (used by the COPY command) reset the user's umask
-to 0 for the remainder of the Kermit process lifetime. The bug was in
-ckufio.c 8.0.194, 24 Oct 2002, and is fixed in ckufio.c 8.0.195, 6 Mar 2003.
-Of course this happened after building 155 C-Kermit 8.0.208 binaries. (But
-before officially releasing 8.0.208.)
-
-In the VMS version, changed:
-
- while ((n--) && xx_inc(2) > -1) ;
-to:
- while ((n--) && xx_inc(2) >= 0) ;
-
-to suppress the "...is being compared with a relational operator to a constant
-whose value is not greater than zero" warning. ckvtio.c, 7 Mar 2002.
-
-Added a debug call to dologend in hopes of catching overzealous Locus
-switching, which seems to happen only in K95. ckuus3.c, 7 Mar 2002.
-
-Rebuilt binaries for some of the more current Unix releases: AIX 4.3.3-5.1,
-Solaris 7-9 , Red Hat 7.0-8.0, Slackware 8.1, Freebsd 4.7-4.8, NetBSD 1.6,
-OpenBSD 3.2, Unixware 7.1.3, Open Unix 8, OSR5.0.6a, etc. A Unix binary with
-COPY umask fix shows a 6 Mar 2003 date for "UNIX File support" in SHOW
-VERSIONS; a binary without the fix shows 24 Oct 2002.
-
-C-Kermit 8.0.208 dated 14 March 2003 released on 10 March 2003.
-
----8.0.208---
-
-From Jeff 13 Mar 2003:
- . Updated SSL module allows importation of tickets from host.
- . freebsd50+openssl target: makefile.
- . FTP PUT /PERMISSIONS error message for K95: ckcftp.c.
-
-Fixed MINPUT to strip quotes or braces from around targets (this was broken
-on Feb 10th). Thanks to Jason Heskett for discovering and reporting this
-(killer) bug. ckuusr.c, 14 Mar 2003.
-
-Changed version number to 209 Dev.00. ckcmai.c, 14 Mar 2003.
-
-While debugging the alphapage script, I found that the command "minput 8 \6\13
-\21\13 \13\27\4\13 \30\13" gets "?Not confirmed" in 8.0.208 and 8.0.209, but
-not in 206 and earlier. This problem too was introduced on Feb 10th by
-changing MINPUT parsing from cmtxt() followed by cksplit() to cmfld() in a
-loop. cmfld() uses setatm() to return its result and of course setatm()
-breaks on \13. Changing setatm() not to do this would break everything else.
-But cmfld() has no arguments that let us tell it to do anything different in
-this case. Changing the API would be a disaster. The only solution is to add
-an "MINPUT ACTIVE" (minputactive) global variable that tells cmfld() to tell
-setatm() not to break on CR. Now MINPUT with braced targets containing CR
-and/or LF works in 209, 206, and 201 (but not 208). ckucmd.c, ckuusr.c,
-ckuus5.c, 15 Mar 2003.
-
-MINPUT n \fjoin(&a) works OK if all the members of \&a[] are text strings, but
-if they are strings of control chars (as above), they don't get separated by
-the spaces. For example in:
-
- dcl \&a[] = "\4\5" "\6\7" xxx
- minput 10 \fjoin(&a)
-
-MINPUT gets two targets: "aaa" and "\4\5 \6\7 xxx". The bug was in the
-cksplit() call in the \fjoin() case of MINPUT: it needed to specify an
-include set consisting of all the control characters except NUL. ckuusr.c,
-16 Mar 2003.
-
-But there's still a problem:
-
- dcl \&a[] = "\4\5\13\10" "\6\7" "xxx"
-
-creates an array whose first member is "^D^E (one doublequote included). But
-if braces are used instead, there's no problem. Same deal as MINPUT: cmfld()
-breaks on CR or LF, thus the end quote is lost. If I set minputactive for
-DECLARE initializers too, that fixes it. Is there any reason not to do this?
-Can't think of any (famous last words)... ckuusr.c, 16 Mar 2003.
-
-Since it has multiple applications, changed the flag's name from minputactive
-to keepallchars. ckucmd.c, ckuus[r5].c, 16 Mar 2003.
-
-\v(exedir) wasn't being set correctly (it included the program name as well
-as the directory). Fixed in getexedir(): ckuus4.c, 16 Mar 2003.
-
-SET CARRIER-WATCH <Esc> "auto matic" (spurious space in supplied keyword).
-Cosmetic only; it still worked. Fixed in setdcd(): ckuus3.c, 16 Mar 2003.
-
-"directory a b c" listed too many files -- all files whose names END WITH a,
-b, or c, rather than the files whose names WERE a, b, or c. Diagnosis: The
-filespec is changed into a pattern: {a,b,c}, which is the correct form. It is
-passed to nzxpand(), which goes through the directory getting filenames and
-sending each one to ckmatch() with the given pattern. ckmatch() receives the
-correct pattern but then prepends a "*" -- that's not right. It's not just
-in filename matching either. The following succeeds when it shouldn't:
-
- if match xxxxc {{a,b,c}} <command>
-
-Changing ckmatch() to not prepend the "*" to each segment fixes the command
-above but breaks lots of others. Running through the "match" torture-test
-script shows the problem occurs only when the {a,b,c} list is the entire
-pattern, and not embedded within a larger pattern. Testing for this case
-fixed the problem. ckmatch(): ckclib.c, 16 Mar 2003.
-
-Fixed FTP MODTIME to not print anything if QUIET ON. ckcftp.c, 16 Mar 2003.
-
-Picked up a new ckuath.c from Jeff, not sure what the changes are. 16 Mar 2003.
-
-Did a few regular and secure builds to make sure I didn't wreck anything.
-
-Changed version number to 209 (final). ckcmai.c, 16 Mar 2003.
-
-Jason Heskett found another bug: if you define a macro FOO inside the
-definition of another macro BAR, and FOO's definition includes an odd number
-of doublequotes (such as 1), FOO's definition absorbs the rest of BAR's
-definition. Example:
-
- def TEST {
- .foo = {X"}
- sho mac foo
- }
- do test
- sho mac foo
-
-Results in:
-
- foo = {X"}, sho mac foo
-
-Diagnosis: the TEST definition becomes:
-
- def TEST .foo = {X"}, sho mac foo
-
-and the macro reader is erroneously treating the doublequote as an open
-quote, and then automatically closes the quote at the end of the definition.
-The error is that a doublequote should be significant only at the beginning of
-a field. But the macro reader isn't a command parser; it doesn't know what
-a field is -- it's just looking for commas and skipping over quoted ones.
-First we have to fix an oversight: SET COMMAND DOUBLEQUOTING OFF should have
-worked here, but it wasn't tested in this case. Fixed in getncm(): ckuus5.c,
-17 Mar 2003.
-
-There are only certain cases where it makes sense to treat doublequotes as
-signicant:
-
- . An open quote must be at the beginning or preceded by a space.
- . A close quote is only at the end or else followed by a space.
-
-This too was fixed in getncm(): ckuus5.c, 17 Mar 2003.
-
-A fix from Jeff SSL/TLS FTP data decoding. ckcftp.c, 18 Mar 2003.
-
-Tried building C-Kermit on a Cray Y-MP with UNICOS 9.0. "int suspend",
-declared in ckcmai.c and used in many modules, conflicts with:
-
- unistd.h:extern int suspend __((int _Category, int _Id));
-
-The "=Dsuspend=xsuspend" trick doesn't work for this; there is no way around
-the conflict other than to rename the variable: ckcmai.c, ckutio.c,
-ckuus[35xy].c. 26 Mar 2003. VMS and K95 not affected.
-
-OK that gets us past ckcmai.c... Then in ckutio.c I had to add a new #ifdef
-around the LFDEVNO setting, because the Cray didn't have mkdev.h. Could not
-find a Cray-specific manifest symbol, so I made a new makefile target (cray9)
-that sets this symbol. Having done this I have no idea what kind of lockfile
-would be created, but I also doubt if anybody dials out from a Cray. The
-binary should run a C90, J90, or Y-MP. makefile, 26 Mar 2003.
-
-Added a target for SCO OSR5.0.7. makefile, ckuver.h, 30 Mar 2003.
-
-Changed since 208:
-makefile ckuver.h ckcmai.c ckclib.c ckcftp.c ckucmd.c ckuus*.c ckutio.c.
-
----8.0.209---
-
-From Mark Sapiro, a fix for the March 17th doubleqote fix, getncm(): ckuus5.c,
-4 Apr 2003.
-
-From Jeff, 29 Apr 2003:
- . Corrected target for HP-UX 11.00 + OpenSSL: makefile,
- . Do not allow WILL AUTH before WONT START_TLS: ckctel.h ckctel.c
- . Add hooks for SFTP and SET/SHOW SFTP: ckcdeb.h ckuusr.h ckuusr.c ckuus3.c
- . Add SKERMIT ckuusr.h ckuusr.c
- . Add ADM-5 terminal emulation: ckuus7.c, ckuus5.c
- . Uncomment and update HELP SET SSH V2 AUTO-REKEY: ckuus2.c
- . Enable IF TERMINAL-MACRO and IF STARTED-FROM-DIALER for C-Kermit: ckuus6.c
- . Fix conflicting NOSCROLL keyword definition: ckuusr.h
- . Set ttname when I_AM_SSH: ckuusy.c
- . Add extended arg parsing for SSH, Rlogin, Telnet: ckuusy.c, ckuus4.c
- . Security updates: ckuath.c, ck_ssl.c
- . Change K95 version number to 2.2.0: ckcmai.c
- . Save K95 term i/o state before executing keyboard macro: ckuus4.c
- . Add tests for SSH Subsystem active during INPUT/OUTPUT/CONNECT: ckuus[45].c
- . Enable K95 SET SSH V2 AUTO-REKEY: ckuus3.c
-
-SFTP and SET SFTP subcommands are implemented up to the case statements.
-
-Files of mine that Jeff hadn't picked up:
- ckuver.h ckcftp.c ckutio.c ckuusx.c (just minor changes for last build-all)
-
-On 4 Jan 2003, SET RECEIVE MOVE-TO was changed to convert is argument to an
-absolute path, which made it impossible to specify a relative path, then
-move to different directories and have it apply relatively to each directory.
-Changed this as follows:
-
- . Parser uses cmtxt() rather than cmdir() so it won't fail at parse time.
- . If path is absolute, we fail at parse time if directory doesn't exist.
- . In reof() we run the the path through xxstring (again, in case deferred
- evaluation of variables is desired) and then, if not null, use it.
- . If the directory doesn't exist, rename() fails and reof() returns -4,
- resulting in a protocol error (this is not a change). We do NOT create
- the directory on the fly.
-
-I also fixed SET SEND/RECEIVE RENAME-TO to parse with cmtxt() rather than
-cmdir(), since it's parsing a text template, not a directory name, e.g.
-"set receive rename-to file-\v(time)-v(date)-\v(pid)". This was totally
-broken, since when I don't know. We don't call xxstring() in this parse, so
-evaluation is always deferred -- I'd better not change this. ckuus7.c,
-ckcfns.c, 1 May 2003.
-
-From Jeff, Sat May 3 14:15:23 2003:
- . Pick up the right isascii definition for K95: ckctel.c
- . malloc... ckuath.c (new safe malloc routines for K95)
- . Add author listing: ckuus5.c
- . SSH Heartbeat support (K95 only): ckuus[23].c
- . Prescan --height and --width to avoid window resizing at startup: ckuusy.c
- . Add checks for fatal() or doexit() called from sysinit(): ckuusx.c
- . Move some K95-specific definitions to ckoker.h: ckcdeb.h
- . Add support for ON_CD macro in zchdir(): ckufio.c
- . Add a command to let FTP client authenticate with SSLv2: ckcftp.c
- . Fix parsing of FTP file facts like "UNIX.mode": ckcftp.c
-
-ON_CD will need some explaining (to be done). It's implemented for Unix,
-VMS, WIndows, and OS/2.
-
-The FTP file facts fix came from first exposure to the new OpenBSD FTP
-server: ftp://ftp7.usa.openbsd.org/pub/os/OpenBSD/3.3/i386/
-The period in "UNIX.mode" caused an erroneous word break, adding junk to
-the filename.
-
-About the malloc changes, Jeff says "K95 is not behaving well in low memory
-environments. I'm not sure that C-Kermit does much better. The program does
-not crash but it certainly does not behave the way the user expects it to.
-I'm beginning to think that any malloc() error should be treated as fatal."
-
-Not visible in these changes because it's in K95-specific modules: Jeff made
-SET ATTRIBUTES OFF and SET ATTRIBUTES DATE OFF apply to XYZMODEM transfers.
-
-From Jeff, 11 May 2003:
- . Add support for SSH Keepalive to relevant SET command (K95): ckuus3.c
- . Reduce max overlapped i/o requests from 30 to 7 (K95): ckuus7.c
- . Don't call sysinit() in fatal(): ckuusx.c.
- . Some new conditionalizations for SSL module: ck_ssl.c
-
-The doublequote-parsing fixes from March and April broke the SWITCH statement,
-which is implemented by internally defining, then executing, a macro. If I
-drop back to the old dumb handling of doublequotes, everything is fixed except
-the problem of March 17th. But can we really expect getncm() to pre-guess
-what the parser is going to do? getncm()'s only job is to find command
-boundaries, which are represented by commas. Commas, however, is needed IN
-commands too. We take a comma literally if it is quoted with \, or is inside
-a matched pair of braces, parens, or doublequotes. It is not unreasonable to
-require a doublequote in a macro definition to be prefixed by \ when it is to
-be taken literally. The proper response to Jason Heskett's complaint of March
-17th should have been to leave the code alone and recommand an appropriate
-form of quoting:
-
- def TEST {
- .foo = {X\"}
- sho mac foo
- }
-
-And this is what I have done. Another reason for sticking with the old method
-is that it's explainable. The "improved" method, even if it worked, would be
-be impossible to explain. Btw, in testing this I noticed that the switch-test
-script made 8.0.201 dump core. Today's version is fine. The problem with
-quoted strings inside of IF {...} clauses and FOR and WHILE loops is fixed
-too. Perhaps "unbroken" would be a better word. ckuus5.c, 11 May 2003.
-
-Vace discovered that FTP MGET /EXCEPT:{... (with an unterminated /EXCEPT list)
-could crash Kermit. Fixed in ckcftp.c, 11 May 2003.
-
-CONTINUE should not affect SUCCESS/FAILURE status. ckuusr.c, 11 May 2003.
-
-Fixed an oversight that goes back 15 years. While \{123} is allowed for
-decimal codes, \x{12} and \o{123} were never handled. ckucmd.c, 11 May 2003.
-
-Added support for Red Hat <baudboy.h> and /usr/sbin/lockdev. Supposedly this
-allows Kermit to be installed without setuid or setgid bits and still be able
-to lock and use the serial device. Compiles and starts, but not tested.
-ckcdeb.h, makefile, ckutio.c, ckuus5.c, 16 May 2003.
-
-From Jeff: FTP ASCII send data to host when FTP /SSL was in use was broken.
-ftp_dpl is set to Clear when FTP /SSL is in use. This was causing the data to
-be written to the socket with send() instead of the OpenSSL routines.
-ckcftp.c, ckuath.c, 21 May 2003.
-
-From Jeff: Stuff for Kerberos 524: ckcdeb.h. Fixes for FTP; "FTP ASCII send
-data did not properly compute the end of line translations. On Unix (and
-similar platforms) the end of line was correct for no character sets but
-incorrect when character sets were specified. On Windows/OS2, the end of line
-was correct when character sets were specified and incorrect when they were
-not. On MAC, both were broken. Also, FTP Send Byte counts were incorrect
-when character sets were specified." ckcftp.c. 17 Jun 2003.
-
-From Jeff: fixes to HTTP /AGENT: and /USER: switch action: ckcnet.c ckuus3.c
-ck_crp.c ckcftp.c ckuus2.c ckuusy.c ckuusr.c ckcnet.h, 21 Jun 2003.
-
-From Jeff: Fix SET DIALER BACKSPACE so it can override a previous SET KEY
-(e.g. from INI file): ckuus7.c. Some SSL/TLS updates: ck_ssl.c. HTTP support
-for VMS and other VMS improvements (e.g. a way to not have to hardwire the
-C-Kerit version number into the build script) from Martin Vorlaender:
-ckcnet.h, ckuus[r3].c, ckcdeb.h, ckvtio.c, ckcnet.c, ckvker.com. Built on
-Solaris (gcc/ansi) and SunOS (cc/k&r). The new VMS script tests the VMS
-version and includes HTTP support only for VMS 6.2 or later. 2 Jul 2003.
-
-Tried to build on our last VMS system but it seems to be dead. Looks like a
-head crash (makes really loud noises, boot says DKA0 not recognized) (fooey, I
-just paid good money to renew the VMS license). Tried building at another
-site with:
-
- Process Software MultiNet V4.3 Rev A-X,
- Compaq AlphaServer ES40, OpenVMS AXP V7.3
- Compaq C V6.4-008 on OpenVMS Alpha V7.3
-
-Had to make a few corrections to ckvker.com. But still, compilation of
-ckcnet.c bombs, indicating that the SELECT definition somehow got lost
-somewhere since the 209 release (i.e. no SELECT type is defined so it falls
-thru to "SELECT is required for this code"). But I don't see anything in
-ckcdeb.h or ckcnet.[ch] that would explain this. Not ckvker.com either
-(putting the old one back gives the same result). OK, I give up, maybe it's
-just that I haven't tried building it on MultiNet recently. What about UCX?
-Aha, builds fine there except for warnings about mlook, dodo, and parser in
-ckvfio.c (because of ON_CD) -- I suppose I have #include <ckucmd.h>... (done)
-Anyhow it builds OK and the HTTP code is active and almost works (HTTP OPEN
-works; HTTP GET seems to succeed but creates an empty file every time). Tried
-building under MultiNet at another installation; same bad result.
-
-OK so why won't it build for MultiNet? Comparing ckcnet.c with the 209
-version, not a single #ifdef or #include is changed. Tried building with
-p3="NOHTTP" -- builds OK, aha. Where's the problem? Not ckcnet.h...
-Not ckcdeb.h... OK I give up, will revisit this next time I get time to
-do anything with the code.
-
-Later Jeff said "Martin did not implement VMS networking for the HTTP code.
-All he did was activate the #define HTTP which happens to work because his
-connections are using SSL/TLS connections. http_inc(), http_tol(), etc have
-no support for VMS networking regardless of whether it is UCX or MULTINET.
-The vast majority of HTTP connections are not secured by SSL/TLS. It makes no
-sense to support HTTP on VMS until someone is willing to either do the work or
-pay have the work done to implement VMS networking in that code base." So the
-fix is to not enable HTTP for VMS after all. Removed the CKHTTP definition
-for VMS from ckcdeb.h, 6 Jul 2003.
-
-Fixed ckvfio.c to #include <ckuusr.h> (instead of <ckucmd.h>) to pick up
-missing prototypes. 6 Jul 2003.
-
-From Arthur Marsh: solaris2xg+openssl+zlib+srp+pam+shadow and the corresponding
-Solaris 7 target. makefile, 6 Jul 2003.
-
-Remove duplicate #includes for <sys/stat.h>, <errno.h>, and <ctype.h> from
-ckcftp.c. 6 Jul 2003.
-
-Add -DUSE_MEMCPY to Motorola SV/68 targets because of shuffled #includes in
-ckcftp.c. 8 Jul 2003.
-
-From Jeff: Fix problems mixing SSL and SRP without Kerberos. Plus a few minor
-#define comment changes and a reshuffling of #defines in ckcdeb.h to allow me
-to build on X86 Windows without Kerberos. ckcdeb.h, ck_crp.c, ckuath.c,
-10 Jul 2003.
-
-From Jeff: updated ckuat2.h and ckuath.c, 29 Jul 2003.
-
-Mats Peterson noticed that a very small Latin-1 file would be incorrectly
-identified as UCS-2 by scanfile(). Fixed in ckuusx.c, 29 Jul 2003.
-
-Fixed ACCESS macro definition to account for the fact that FIND is now a
-built-in command. ckermit.ini, 30 Jul 2003.
-
-From Jeff: Fix for typo in urlparse() (svc/hos): ckuusy.c, 18 Aug 2003.
-
-From Jeff: Redhat9 makefile targets (needed for for OpenSSL 0.9.7):
-makefile, 19 Aug 2003.
-
-GREP /NOLIST and /COUNT did too much magic, with some undesirable fallout:
-"GREP /NOLIST /COUNT:x args" printed "file:count" for each file. "GREP
-/COUNT:x /NOLIST args" did not print "file:count", but neither did it set the
-count variable. Removed the magic. Also one of the GREP switches,
-/LINENUMBERS, was out of order. Fixed in ckuus6.c, 20 Aug 2003.
-
-From Jeff: "Reorganizing code to enable building with different subsets of
-options; a few typos corrected as well." ckcdeb.h, ckuver.h (for RH9),
-ckcnet.c, ckuus7.c, ckuus3.c: 24 Aug 2003.
-
-Scanfile misidentified a big PDF file as text because the first 800K of it
-*was* text (most other PDF files were correctly tagged as binary). Fixed
-by adding a check for the PDF signature at the beginning of the file.
-scanfile(): ckuusx.c, 25 Aug 2003.
-
-Ditto for PostScript files, but conservatively. Signature at beginning of
-file must begin with "%!PS-Ado". If it's just "%!" (or something nonstandard
-like "%%Creator: Windows PSCRIPT") we do a regular scan. Also added "*.ps"
-to all binary filename patterns. ckuusx.c, 4 Sep 2003.
-
-Ditto (but within #ifndef NOPCLSCAN) for PCL (<ESC>E) and PJL (<ESC>%) files,
-but no binpatterns (note: ".PCL" is the extension for TOPS-20 EXEC scripts).
-ckuusx.c, 4 Sep 2003.
-
-Added comments about OpenSSL 0.9.7 to all linux+openssl targets.
-makefile, 4 Sep 2003.
-
-From Jeff: Added - #define ALLOW_KRB_3DES_ENCRYPT. When this symbol is defined
-at compilation Kermit will allow non-DES session keys to be used during Telnet
-Auth. These session keys can then be used for Telnet Encrypt. The reason
-this is not compiled on by default is that the MIT Kerberos Telnet does not
-follow the RFC for constructing keys for ENCRYPT DES when the keys are longer
-than 8 bytes in length. ckuath.c, ckuus5.c, 4 Sep 2003.
-
-"ftp mget a b c" succeeded if one or more of the files did not exist, even
-with "set ftp error-action proceed". This is because the server's NLST file
-list does not include any files that don't exist, so the client never even
-tries to get them. Fortunately, the way the code is structured, this one was
-easy to fix. ckcftp.c, 14 Sep 2003.
-
-From Jeff: Corrected code in ckcnet.c to ensure that Reverse DNS Lookups are
-not performed if tcp_rdns is OFF. Fixed ck_krb5_getrealm() to actually return
-the realm of the credentials cache and not the default realm specified in the
-krb5.conf file. Previously krb5_cc_get_principal() was not being called.
-Fixed ck_krb5_is_tgt_valid() to test the TGT in the current ccache and not the
-TGT constructed from the default realm. ckcnet.c, ckuath.c, 14 Sep 2003.
-
-Marco Bernardi noticed that IF DIRECTORY could produce a false positive if
-the argument directory had previously been referenced but then removed. This
-is because of the clever isdir() cache that was added to speed up recursion
-through big directory trees. Changed IF DIRECTORY to make a second check
-(definitive but more expensive) if isdir() succeeds, and changed the
-directory-deleting routine, ckmkdir(), to flush the directory cache (UNIX
-only -- this also should be done in K95 but it's not critical). This was
-done by adding a routine, clrdircache() to ckufio.c, which sets prevstat
-to -1 and prevpath[0] to NUL. ckcfn3.c, ckuus6.c, ckufio.c, 18 Sep 2003.
-
-Marco reported the second fix still didn't work for him (even though it did
-for me). Rather than try to figure out why, I concluded that the directory
-cache is just not safe: a directory found a second ago might have been deleted
-or renamed not only by Kermit but by some other process. Why did I add this
-in the first place? The log says:
-
- Some debug logs showed that isdir() is often called twice in a row on the
- same file. Rather than try to sort out clients, I added a 1-element cache
- to Unix isdir(). ckufio.c, 24 Apr 2000.
-
-Experimentation with DIR and DIR /RECURSIVE does not show this happening at
-all. So I #ifdef'd out the directory cache (see #ifdef ISDIRCACHE in ckufio.c;
-ISDIRCACHE is not defined) and backed off the previous changes: ckufio.c,
-ckcfn3.c, ckuus6.c, 28 Sep 2003.
-
-From Jeff: Replace the compile time ALLOW_KRB_3DES_ENCRYPT with a run-time
-command SET TELNET BUG AUTH-KRB5-DES which defaults to ON: ckctel.[ch],
-ckuus[234].c, ck_crp.c, ckuath.c. 4 Oct 2003.
-
-Allow DIAL RETRIES to be any positive number, and catch negative ones.
-Also added code to check for atoi() errors (e.g. truncation). At least on
-some platforms (e.g. Solaris) atoi() is supposed to set errno, but it
-doesn't. ckuus3.c, ckucmd.c, 4 Oct 2003.
-
-Added /DEFAULT: to ASK-class commands (ASK, ASKQ, GETOK):
-
- . For popups: no way to send defaults to popup_readtext() or popup_readpass().
- . For GUI ASK[Q], pass default to gui_txt_dialog().
- . For GUI GETOK, convert "yes" "ok" or "no" default to number for uq_ok().
- . For Text GETOK, add default to cmkey().
- . For Text ASK[Q], add default to cmtxt().
- . For GETC, GETKEY, and READ: no changes.
-
-GETOK, ASK, and ASKQ with /TIMEOUT: no longer fail when the timer goes off
-if a /DEFAULT was supplied. The GUI functions (uq_blah) don't seem to
-support timeouts. Only the text version has been tested. ckuus[26].c,
-4 Oct 2003.
-
-From Jeff: add /DEFAULT: for popups. ckuus6.c. 6 Oct 2003.
-
-Change SET DIAL INTERVAL to be like SET DIAL RETRIES. ckuus[34].c, 6 Oct 2003.
-
-Added target for HP-UX 10/11 + OpenSSL built with gcc, from Chris Cheney.
-Makefile, 12 Oct 2003.
-
-From Jeff, 6 Nov 2003:
- . #ifdef adjustments: ckcftp.c, ckcdeb.h
- . Fix spurious consumption of first byte(s) on Telnet connection: ckctel.c
- . Another HP PJL test for scanfile: ckuusx.c.
- . K95: Recognize DG4xx protected fields in DG2xx emulation: ckuus7.c.
- . Add SSLeay version display to SHOW AUTH command: ckuus7.c
- . Improved SET MOUSE CLEAR help text: ckuus2.c.
- . Improved Kverbs help text: ckuus2.c (+ new IBM-3151 Kverbs).
- . Some changes to ck_ssl.c, ckuath.c.
-
-From PeterE, 10 Nov 2003:
- . Improved HP-UX 10/11 makefile targets for OpenSSL.
- . #ifdef fix for OpenSSL on HP-UX: ck_ssl.c.
-
-Another new makefile from PeterE with improved and integrated HP-UX targets.
-12 Nov 2003.
-
-A couple fixes to the solaris9g+krb5+krb4+openssl+shadow+pam+zlib target
-from Jeff. Added a solaris9g+openssl+shadow+pam+zlib target. makefile,
-21 Nov 2003.
-
-From Jeff, 30 Nov 2003:
- . Fix SEND /MOVE-TO: ckuusr.c.
- . Fix K95 SET TITLE to allow quotes/braces around text: ckuus7.c.
- . Improved "set term autodownload ?" response: ckuus5.c.
- . Fix SHOW FEATURES to specify the protocol for encryption: ckuus5.c
- . Make {SEND, RECEIVE} {MOVE-TO, RENAME-TO} work for XYZMODEM (K95 only).
-
-From Jeff: 7 Jan 2004:
- . At one point Frank started to add a timer parameter to the
- uq_txt() function but he only did it for the non-ANSI
- compilers. I added it for the ANSI compilers, fixed the
- prototypes and provided a default value easily changed
- DEFAULT_UQ_TIMEOUT: ckcker.h, ckuus[36].c, ck_ssl.c, ckcftp.c, ckuath.c.
- . Fixed SET TERMINAL DEBUG ON (typo in variable name): ckuus7.c.
- . Fixed BEEP INFORMATION; previously it made no sound, now uses
- MB_ICONQUESTION. ckuusx.c.
-
-From Ian Beckwith <ian@nessie.mcc.ac.uk> (Debianization), 7 Jan 2004:
- . Search dir/ckermit for docs, as well as dir/kermit in cmdini(): ckuus5.c.
- . New linux+krb5+krb4+openssl+shadow+pam target (kitchen sink minus SRP,
- which Debian does not distribute): makefile.
- ? Mangles the DESTDIR support in makefile to install into a staging area:
- makefile (I didn't take this one yet).
-
-Updated copyright notices for 2004, all modules. 7 Jan 2004.
-
-Added INPUT /NOMATCH, allowing INPUT to be used for a fixed amount of time
-without attempting to match any text or patterns, so it's no longer
-necessary to "input 600 STRING_THAT_WILL_NEVER_COME". If /NOMATCH is
-included, INPUT succeeds if the timeout expires, with \v(instatus) = 1
-(meaning "timed out"); fails upon interruption or i/o error. ckuusr.h,
-ckuus[r24].c, 7 Jan 2004.
-
-Added SET INPUT SCALE-FACTOR <float>. This scales all INPUT timeouts by the
-given factor, allowing time-sensitive scripts to be adjusted to changing
-conditions such as congested networks or different-speed modems without
-having to change each INPUT-class command. This affects only those timeouts
-that are given in seconds, not as wall-clock times. Although the scale
-factor can have a fractional part, the INPUT timeout is still an integer.
-Added this to SHOW INPUT, and added a \v(inscale) variable for it.
-ckuusr.h, ckuus[r257].c, 7 Jan 2004.
-
-undef \%a, \fverify(abc,\%a) returns 0, which makes it look as if \%a is a
-string composed of a's, b's, and/or c's, when in fact it contains nothing.
-Changed \fverify() to return -1 in this case. ckuus4.c, 12 Jan 2004.
-
-\fcode(xxx) returned an empty string if its argument string was empty. This
-makes it unsafe to use in arithmetic or boolean expressions. Changed it to
-return 0 if its argument was missing, null, or empty. ckuus4.c, 12 Jan 2004.
-
-Updated \verify() and \fcode() help text. ckuus2.c, 12 Jan 2004.
-
-While setting up IKSD, Ian Beckwith noticed that including the --initfile:
-option caused Kermit to start parsing its own Copyright string as if it were
-the command line, and eventually crash. I couldn't reproduce on Solaris /
-Sparc but I could in Linux / i386 (what Ian is using) -- a change from Jeff
-on 28 Apr 2003 set the command-line arg pointer to a literal empty string in
-prescan() about line 1740 of of ckuus4.c; the pointer is incremented next
-time thru the loop, resulting in random memory being referenced. Fixed by
-setting the pointer to NULL instead of "". ckuus4.c, 12 Jan 2004.
-
-declare \&a[999999999999999] would dump core on some platforms. atoi()
-or whatever would truncate the dimension to maxint. When we add 1 to the
-result, we get a negative number, which is used as an index, loop test, etc.
-Fixed both dodcl() and dclarray() to check for (n+1 < 0). ckuus[r5].c,
-12 Jan 2004.
-
-Unix zchki() would fail on /dev/tty, which is unreasonable. This prevented
-FOPEN /READ from reading from the terminal. zchki() already allowed for
-/dev/null, so I added /dev/tty to the list of specials. Ditto for FOPEN
-/WRITE and zchko(). ckufio.c 13 Jan 2004.
-
-Added untabify() routine to ckclib.[ch], 13 Jan 2004.
-Added FREAD /TRIM and /UNTABIFY. ckuus[27].c, 13 Jan 2004.
-Added \funtabify(). ckuusr.h, ckuus[24].c, 13 Jan 2004.
-
-Dat Nguyen noticed that (setq u 'p') followed by (u) dumped core. This was
-caused by an over-clever optimization that skipped mallocs for short
-literals, but then went on later to try to free one that hadn't been
-malloc'd. Fixed in dosexp(): ckuus3.c, 14 Jan 2004.
-
-Catch another copyright date. ckuus5.c, 14 Jan 2004.
-
-Fixed SWITCH to work even when SET COMMAND DOUBLEQUOTE OFF (from Mark
-Sapiro). ckuus5.c, 15 Jan 2004.
-
-Changed version to 8.0.211 so scripts can test for recently added features.
-ckcmai.c, 15 Jan 2004.
-
-Fixed a glitch in K95 "help set port". ckuus2.c, 20 Jan 2004.
-
-Fix from Jeff: Connections to a TLS-aware protocol which require a reconnect
-upon certificate verification failure could not reconnect if the connection
-was initiated from the command line or via a URL. ckctel.c ckcmai.c
-ckuusr.c ckuus7.c ckuusy.c, 20 Jan 2004.
-
-From Alex Lewin: makefile target and #ifdef for Mac OS X 10.3 (Panther):
-makefile, ckcnet.c, 7 Feb 2004.
-
-Added KFLAGS to sco32v507 targets to make PTY and SSH commands work. The
-same flags could probably also be added to earlier OSR5 targets but they
-have not been tested there. makefile, 7 Feb 2004.
-
-Checked a complaint that "LOCAL &a" did not make array \&a[] local. Indeed
-it did not, and can not. You have to use the full syntax in the LOCAL
-command, "LOCAL \&a[]", or else it doesn't know it's not a macro named &a.
-7 Feb 2004.
-
-Fixed some confusion in creating IKSD database file and temp-file names.
-I was calling zfnqfp() without remembering that the path member of the
-returned struct included the filename, so to get just the directory name,
-I needed to strip the filename from the right. ckuusy.c, 2 Mar 2004.
-
-New ckuath.c, ck_ssl.c from Jeff. 2 Mar 2004.
-
-Updated Jeff's affiliation in VERSION command text. ckuusr.c, 2 Mar 2004.
-
-Designation changed from Dev.00 to Beta.01. ckcmai.c, 2 Mar 2004.
-
-Fixed zrename() syslogging -- it had success and failure reversed.
-Beta.02: ckufio.c, 4 Mar 2004.
-
-Problem: when accessing IKSD via a kermit:// or iksd:// URL, and a user ID
-is given but no password, doxarg() set the password to "" instead of leaving
-it NULL, but all the tests in dourl() are for NULL. Fixed in doxarg():
-ckuusy.c, 5 Mar 2004.
-
-The logic in dourl() about which macro to construct (login and connect,
-login and get directory listing, or login and fetch a file) was a bit off,
-so all three cases were not handled. ckcmai.c, 5 Mar 2004.
-
-Trial Beta builds:
- . HP-UX B.11.11 PA-RISC
- . HP-UX B.11.23 IA64
- . Tru64 4.0G Alpha
- . Tru64 5.1B Alpha
- . Debian 3.0 i386
- . Red Hat ES 2.1 i386
- . Slackware 9.1 i386
- . VMS 7.3-1 Alpha + UCX 5.3
- . VMS 7.3-1 Alpha no TCP/IP
- . VMS 7.3 Alpha MultiNet 4.3 A-X
- . SCO UnixWare 7.1.4 i386
- . SCO OSR5.0.7 i386
- . Solaris 9 Sparc
-
-Fixed compiler warning in doxarg() caused by typo (NULL instead of NUL) in
-the 5 March doxarg() edit. ckuusy.c, 9 Mar 2004.
-
-IKSD (kermit://) command-line URLs did not work right if the client had
-already preauthenticated with Kerberos or somesuch because they tried to log
-in again with REMOTE LOGIN. The macros constructed in doxarg() needed to
-check \v(authstate) before attempting REMOTE LOGIN. ckcmai.c, 10 Mar 2004.
-
-Added ckuker.nr to x.sh (ckdaily upload) and updated ckuker.nr with current
-version number and dates. 10 Mar 2004.
-
-Replaced hardwired references to /usr/local in makefile with $(prefix)
-(which defaults to /usr/local, but can be overridden on the command line),
-suggested by Nelson Beebe for use with Configure. 10 Mar 2004.
-
-From Nelson Beebe: In the Kermit makefile in the install target commands,
-line 981 reads:
-
- cp $(BINARY) $(DESTDIR)$(BINDIR)/kermit || exit 1;\
-
-Could you please add this line before it:
-
- rm -f $(DESTDIR)$(BINDIR)/kermit;\
-
-Some sites (mine included) keep multiple versions of software around,
-with hard links between $(prefix)/progname and $(prefix)/progname-x.y.z.
-Failure to remove the $(prefix)/progname at "make install" time then
-replaces the old $(prefix)/progname-x.y.z with the new one, destroying
-an old version that the site wanted to be preserved. makefile, 10 Mar 2004.
-
-Minor syntax and typo fixes (mostly prototypes): ckcdeb.h, ckcfns.c,
-ckclib.c, ckufio.c, ckuusr.h, ckuusx.c, 10 Mar 2004. (I still have a few
-more to do.)
-
-Added CC=$(CC) CC2=$(CC2) to many (but not all) makefile targets that
-reference other makefile targets. On some platforms (notably AIX, Solaris,
-SunOS) there are specific targets for different compilers, so I skipped
-those. makefile, 10 Mar 2004.
-
-Added error checking to kermit:// URL macros, so they don't plow ahead
-after the connection is closed. ckcmai.c, 11 Mar 2004.
-
-Added FreeBSD 4.9 and 5.1 targets (only the herald is affected).
-makefile, ckuver.h, 11 Mar 2004.
-
-Added "LIBS=-lcrypt" to bsd44 targets since nowadays crypt is almost always
-unbundled from libc. Also added explanatory notes. makefile, 11 Mar 2004.
-
-Changed MANDIR to default to $(manroot)/man/man1, and manroot to default
-to $(prefix). More adding of CC=$(CC) clauses: {Free,Net,Open}BSD, 4.4BSD.
-makefile, 11 Mar 2004.
-
-Miscellaneous cleanups: ckuusx.c, ckcnet.c, ckufio.c, 11 Mar 2004.
-
-Corrected the check in the linux target to see if /usr/include/crypt.h
-exists, and if so to define HAVE_CRYPT_H, which is used in ckcdeb.h to
-#include <crypt.h> to get the prototype for crypt() and prevent bogus
-conversions on its return type on 64-bit platforms (the previous test wasn't
-quite right and the resulting symbol wasn't spelled right). makefile,
-12 Mar 2004.
-
-From Jeff, 14 Mar 2004:
- . Initialize localuidbuf[] in tn_snenv(): ckctel.c.
- . Remove remote-mode checks in hupok() for K95G only (why?): ckuus3.c.
- . Add help text for new K95-only TYPE /GUI switches: ckuus2.c.
- . TYPE /GUI parsing, ...: ckuusr.c.
- . TYPE /GUI action, dotype(): ckuus6.c
- . Change Jeff's affiliation: most modules.
-
-20 Mar 2004: Looked into adding long file support, i.e. handling files more
-than 2GB (or 4GB) long. Discovered very quickly this would be a major
-project. Each platform has a different API, or environment, or transition
-plan, or whatever -- a nightmare to handle in portable code. At the very
-least we'll need to convert a lot of Kermit variables from long or unsigned
-long to some new Kermit type, which in turn is #defined or typedef'd
-appropriately for each platform (to off_t or size_t or whatever). Then we
-have to worry about the details of open() vs fopen(); printf() formats (%lld
-vs %Ld vs %"PRId64"...), platforms like HP-UX where you might have to use
-different APIs for different file systems on the same computer, etc. We'll
-need to confront this soon, but let's get a good stable 8.0.211 release out
-first! Meanwhile, for future reference, here are a few articles:
-
-General: http://freshmeat.net/articles/view/709/
-Linux: http://www.ece.utexas.edu/~luo/linux_lfs.html
-HP-UX: http://devrsrc1.external.hp.com/STK/partner/lg_files.pdf
-Solaris: http://wwws.sun.com/software/whitepapers/wp-largefiles/largefiles.pdf
-
-Looked into FTP timeouts. It appears I can just call empty() (which is
-nothing more than a front end for select()) with the desired timeout before
-any kind of network read. If it returns <= 0, we have a timeout. This is
-not quite the same as using alarm() / signal() around a recv() (which could
-get stuck) but alarm() / signal() are not not used in the FTP module and are
-not naturally portable to Windows, but select() is already in use in the FTP
-module for both Unix and Windows. This form of timeout could be used
-portably for both command response and data reads. What about writes to the
-command or data socket? They can get stuck for hours and hours without
-returning too, but the select() approach won't help here -- we need the
-actual send() or recv() to time out, or be wrapped in an alarm()/signal()
-kind of mechanism. But if we can do that for sends, we can also do it for
-receives. Better check with Jeff before I start programming anything.
-20 Mar 2004.
-
-Later: Decided to postpone the above two projects (ditto IPv6) until after
-8.0.211 is released because both will have major impacts on portability.
-Grumble: all i/o APIs should have been designed from the beginning with a
-timeout parameter. To this day, hardly any have this feature.
-
-3-4 Apr 2004: More 8.0.211 Beta.02+ test builds:
-
- . FreeBSD 3.3
- . FreeBSD 4.4
- . Linux Debian 2.1
- . Linux RH 6.1
- . Linux RH 7.1
- . Linux RH 7.2
- . Linux RH 9 (with 84 different combinations of feature selection)
- . Linux SuSE 6.4
- . Linux SuSE 7.0
- . NetBSD 1.4.1
- . NetBSD 1.5.2
- . OpenBSD 2.5
- . OpenBSD 3.0
- . QNX 4.25
- . SCO UnixWare 2.1.3
- . SCO UnixWare 7.1.4
- . SCO OpenServer 5.0.7
- . SCO XENIX 2.3.4 (no TCP)
-
-Changes needed: None.
-
-Problem: SCO XENIX 2.3.4 network build failed in the FTP module with
-header-file syntax and conflicting-definitions trouble. I'm not going to
-try to fix it; 8.0.209 built OK with FTP, so we'll just keep that one
-available.
-
-Got access to VMS 8.1 on IA64. Building the nonet version of C-Kermit
-required minor modifications to ckvvms.h, ckv[ft]io.c, and ckvcon.c, to
-account for a third architecture. Also to SHOW FEATURES in ckuus5.c. Once
-that was done, the UCX 5.5 version built OK too. Starts OK, makes Telnet
-connection OK, sends files. Has some obvious glitches though -- "stat"
-after a file transfer reports 0 elapsed time (in fact it was 00:09:48) and
-1219174400 cps (when in fact it was 10364). This doesn't happen on the
-Alpha. Btw, the IA64 binary is twice as big as the Alpha one. Changed
-to Beta.03. 5 Apr 2004.
-
-Fixed the ckdaily script to include the makefile and man page in the Zip
-file (they were not included because the Zip file was intended mainly for
-VMS users, but some Unix users prefer Zip to tar.gz). 6 Apr 2004.
-
-Traced problems in VMS/IA64 statistics report to rftimer()/gftimer() in
-ckvtio.c, which use sys$ and lib$ calls to figure elapsed time. These work
-on VAX and Alpha but not IA64. Sent a report to the chief engineer of the
-IA64 VMS port; he says it's probably a bug in VMS 8.1 (which is not a real
-release); he'll make sure it's fixed in 8.2. As an experiment, tried
-swapping in the Unix versions of these routines (which call gettimeofday()
-etc). They seem work just fine (it hung a couple times but I think that's
-because the underlying system hung too; trying it later on a new connection,
-it was fine; however I noticed a BIG discrepancy in throughput between
-sending and receiving). Moved definitions for VMS64BIT and VMSI64 to
-ckcdeb.h so all modules can use them and added them to the SHOW FEATURES
-display. Added VMSV80 definition to build procedure. Beta.03+. ckcdeb.h,
-ckcuus5.c, ckcvvms.h, ckvtio.c, ckvker.com, 6 Apr 2004.
-
-While doing the build-all, I noticed the VMS version did not build with
-Multinet or older UCX versions, always with the same errors -- undeclared
-variables, undefined symbols, all TCP/IP related. This didn't happen a
-couple weeks ago... Somehow the order of #includes was messed up --
-ckuusr.h depended on symbols that are defined in ckcnet.h, but ckcnet.h
-was being included after ckuusr.h... this was compounded by two missing
-commas in ckvker.com. 11 Apr 2004.
-
-Removed Beta designation, released as 8.0.211, 10 Apr 2004.
-
----8.0.211---
-
-I had somehow lost the edit to ckutio.c that changed the UUCP lockfile for
-Mac OS X from /var/spool/uucp to /var/spool/lock. So I slipped it in and
-re-uploaded version 8.0.211. You can tell the difference because SHOW
-VERSIONS has a 17 Apr 2004 for the Communications I/O module. Also the 10.3
-executable now has a designer banner: "Mac OS X 10.3". makefile, ckuver.h,
-ckutio.c, ckuus[45].c, 17 Apr 2004.
-
-***********************
+++ /dev/null
-C-KERMIT CHANGE LOG (Changes since 8.0.207 / K95 2.1.3 January 2003)
-
- Chronological order.
- Go to the bottom to find the newest edits.
-
- F. da Cruz, The Kermit Project, Columbia University, NYC.
-
-FTP USER, FTP ACCOUNT, plus the various prompts and switches for FTP username,
-password, and account all neglected to strip quotes, and in most cases quotes
-are necessary to specify a username that contains spaces. ckcftp.c,
-15 Jan 2003.
-
-FTP MPUT f1 f2 f3... gets a parse error if any of the fn's do not match an
-existing file. This is bad for scripts. In doftpput(), cmfdb() looks for
-keywords (switches) or CMIFI. When it hits CMIFI, it exits from the initial
-parse loop and then does additional cmifi()s in a loop until done. The most
-obvious fix is to parse each field with cmfdb(CMIFI,CMFLD), i.e. fall back to
-CMFLD if CMIFI doesn't match anything. Then if CMFLD was used, we don't add
-the filespec to the list. This is a rather big change but it seems to work.
-No error messages or failures happen for non-matching fields, but an error
-message is printed (and the MPUT command fails) if none of the fields match
-any files. This fix got in too late for 2.1.3; workaround: use C-Shell
-like wildcard list (ftp mput "{*.abc,foo.*}"). ckcftp.c, 16 Jan 2003.
-
-GREP did not pass its pattern through the expander, thus variables could
-not be used for patterns. This must have been an oversight -- I can't find
-anything in my notes about it. Fixed in dogrep(): ckuus6.c, 24 Jan 2003.
-
-New makefile target for HP-UX 11.xx with OpenSSL from Tapani Tarvainen.
-makefile, 31 Jan 2003.
-
-From Jeff:
- . Avoid core dump when dereferencing tnc_get_signature(): ckuus4.c.
- . Bump version numbers to 8.0.208, 2.1.4: ckcmai.c.
-
-Added /NOLOGIN to FTP [OPEN]. ckcftp.c, 10 Feb 2003.
-
-Don't dump core if FTP DEBUG is ON and FTP OPEN does not include a service.
-openftp(): ckcftp.c, 10 Feb 2003.
-
-HELP PATTERN text incorrectly identified commands and functions with
-floating and anchored patterns. The corrected lists are:
-Floating: GREP, TYPE /MATCH:, /EXCEPT: patterns, \farraylook(),
-Anchored: IF MATCH, file-matching wildcards, \fsearch(), \frsearch()
-ckuus2.c, 10 Feb 2003.
-
-INPUT n \fpattern(xxx) did not work for case-independent comparisons.
-Fixed in doinput(): ckuus4.c, 10 Feb 2003.
-
-It seems \fpattern() didn't work with MINPUT at all. There was no code to
-handle \fpattern() in the MINPUT parse loop, so it never worked. The code
-had to be totally rewritten to use cmfld() in a loop, rather than cmtxt()
-and then cksplit(). Furthermore, whenever any of the fields was an
-\fjoin(), this had to be split. ckuusr.c, 10 Feb 2003.
-
-Macro replacement via \m() and \fdefinition() does not work as advertised
-(i.e. case sensitively) for associative array elements; e.g. \m(xxx<abc>) is
-treated the same as \m(xxx<ABC>), contrary to section 7.10.10 of the C-Kermit
-7.0 update notes, and to the fact that the two really do exist separately.
-Fixed by adding a static function isaarray(s) which succeeds if s is an
-associative array reference and fails otherwise, and then having \m()
-and \fdef() call mxxlook() (case-sensitive lookup) if isaarray(), otherwise
-(as before) mxlook()). ckuus4.c, 11 Feb 2003.
-
-Fixed FTP OPEN to allow the /USER switch to override SET FTP AUTOLOGIN OFF,
-just as /NOLOGIN overrides SET FTP AUTOLOGIN ON. ckcftp.c, 11 Feb 2003.
-
-In K95, "set key \1234 \27H" (any SET KEY command in which the first char of
-the definition was backslash, and the ONLY character after the backslash
-quantity was an uppercase letter, that letter would be lowercased). Diagnosis:
-xlookup() poking its argument (see notes from July 2000). Jeff sent a fix.
-ckucmd.c, 15 Feb 2003.
-
-Ran my S-Expression torture test to make sure Sexps still worked. They do,
-except the bitwise & and | operators were broken, e.g. (& 7 2) and (| 1 2 4)
-get "Invalid operand" errors. Jeff's code had added an early failure return
-from the lookup loop when when a single-byte keyword matched a keyword that
-started with the same byte but was more than one byte long. So "&" would hit
-"&&" and fail instead of continuing its search (xlookup tables aren't sorted
-so there can be no early return). Fixed in xlookup(): ckucmd.c, 16 Feb 2003.
-
-Got rid of "krbmit" target from makefile. It's still there, but we don't
-use it any more. All secure targets now use "xermit", and produce a binary
-called wermit, just like the regular ones do (except the old ckucon.c ones).
-Non-secure targets, since they don't define any of the security symbols,
-wind up compiling and linking to (mostly) empty security modules. makefile,
-15 Feb 2003.
-
-Added \fcvtdate(xxx,3) to format its result in MDTM format (yyyymmddhhmmss,
-all numeric, no spaces or punctuation). Of course these numeric strings
-are too big to be 32-bit numbers and are useless for arithmetic, but they're
-useful for lexical comparison, etc. ckuus[24].c, 16 Feb 2003.
-
-The following FTP commands did not set FAILURE when they failed: RMDIR,
-CD, CDUP, Fixed in the corresponding doftpblah() routines. ckcftp.c,
-16 Feb 2003.
-
-RENAME would sometimes not print an error message when it failed, e.g. in K95
-when the destination file already existed. ckuus6.c, 17 Feb 2003.
-
-Fixed COPY error messages, which did not come out in standard format when
-/LIST was not included. ckuus6.c, 17 Feb 2003.
-
-Fixed #ifdefs in ck_crp.c to allow nonsecure builds on old platforms like
-System V/68 R3. 19 Feb 2003.
-
-Similar treatment for ck_ssl.c. 20 Feb 2003.
-
-From Jeff, 21 Feb 2003:
- . AIX53 and AIX52 symbols for ckcdeb.h, makefile.
- . New gcc targets for various AIX 4.x/5.x versions: makefile.
- . Copyright date updates: ck_crp.c, ck_ssl.c.
- . ENABLE/DISABLE QUERY broken because keyword table out of order: ckuusr.c.
- . Fixed the use of HTTP proxies for HTTP [RE]OPEN for Unix: ckcnet.c.
-
-Also for K95 only: Allow file transfer when K95 is invoked on the remote end
-of a connection to a Pragma Systems Terminal Server connection; automatically
-SET EXIT HANGUP OFF when invoked with open port handle ("k95 -l nnnn").
-
-"cd a*" failed even when "a*" matched only one directory. Fixed in cmifi():
-ckucmd.c, 21 Feb 2003.
-
-In the Unix version, replace "extern int errno;" with "#include <errno.h>"
-if __GLIBC__ is defined, since glibc now defines a thread-specific errno.
-ckcdeb.h, 26 Feb 2003.
-
-Added #ifdefs to skip compilation of ckuath.c in nonsecure builds. Tested
-by building both secure and regular versions in Linux. ckuath.c, 26 Feb 2003.
-
-Ran the build-in-84-different-configurations script on Linux to make sure it
-still builds with all different combinations of feature selection options.
-All OK. 26 Feb 2003.
-
-Built on VMS. Needed to add a prototype for mxxlook*() to ckuusr.h; built
-OK otherwise. 26 Feb 2003.
-
-From Jeff: More #ifdef shuffling for nonsecure builds: ckuath.c, ck_ssl.c,
-27 Feb 2003.
-
-Added code to ensure \v(download) ends in a directory separator in Unix,
-Windows, and OS/2. ckuus7.c, 27 Feb 2003.
-
-Added code to K95 zfnqfp() to tack on directory separator when returning
-a directory name. ckofio.c, 27 Feb 2003.
-
-Somehow an old copy of ckuath.c popped to replace the new one. Put the new
-one back. 28 Feb 2003.
-
-From Jeff: Fix typo in my K95 zfnqfp() code from yesterday; fixes for handling
-UNCs uniformly, no matter which way their slashes are leaning. ckofio.c,
-28 Feb 2003.
-
-At Jeff Mezei's suggestion, separate text and binary mode open sequences
-for VMS session log. ckvfio.c, 28 Feb 2003.
-
-Added freebsd48 target for FreeBSD 4.8. makefile, 1 Mar 2003.
-
-Changed Mac OS X entries to include -DUSE_STRERROR. makefile, 2 Mar 2003.
-
-Fixed GETOK /GUI to evaluate its text argument. ckuus6.c, 3 Mar 2003.
-
-Jeff fixed the K95 Dialer QUICK dialog to (a) allow templates, and (b) have
-a Save-As option. 3 Mar 2003.
-
-Jeff fixed a problem with the Xmodem-CRC checksum being crunched whenever
-there was a retransmission. 7 Mar 2003.
-
-Added target/banner for Tru64 5.1B. makefile, ckuver.h, 5 Mar 2003.
-
-In Unix, the zcopy() routine (used by the COPY command) reset the user's umask
-to 0 for the remainder of the Kermit process lifetime. The bug was in
-ckufio.c 8.0.194, 24 Oct 2002, and is fixed in ckufio.c 8.0.195, 6 Mar 2003.
-Of course this happened after building 155 C-Kermit 8.0.208 binaries. (But
-before officially releasing 8.0.208.)
-
-In the VMS version, changed:
-
- while ((n--) && xx_inc(2) > -1) ;
-to:
- while ((n--) && xx_inc(2) >= 0) ;
-
-to suppress the "...is being compared with a relational operator to a constant
-whose value is not greater than zero" warning. ckvtio.c, 7 Mar 2002.
-
-Added a debug call to dologend in hopes of catching overzealous Locus
-switching, which seems to happen only in K95. ckuus3.c, 7 Mar 2002.
-
-Rebuilt binaries for some of the more current Unix releases: AIX 4.3.3-5.1,
-Solaris 7-9 , Red Hat 7.0-8.0, Slackware 8.1, Freebsd 4.7-4.8, NetBSD 1.6,
-OpenBSD 3.2, Unixware 7.1.3, Open Unix 8, OSR5.0.6a, etc. A Unix binary with
-COPY umask fix shows a 6 Mar 2003 date for "UNIX File support" in SHOW
-VERSIONS; a binary without the fix shows 24 Oct 2002.
-
-C-Kermit 8.0.208 dated 14 March 2003 released on 10 March 2003.
-
----8.0.208---
-
-From Jeff 13 Mar 2003:
- . Updated SSL module allows importation of tickets from host.
- . freebsd50+openssl target: makefile.
- . FTP PUT /PERMISSIONS error message for K95: ckcftp.c.
-
-Fixed MINPUT to strip quotes or braces from around targets (this was broken
-on Feb 10th). Thanks to Jason Heskett for discovering and reporting this
-(killer) bug. ckuusr.c, 14 Mar 2003.
-
-Changed version number to 209 Dev.00. ckcmai.c, 14 Mar 2003.
-
-While debugging the alphapage script, I found that the command "minput 8 \6\13
-\21\13 \13\27\4\13 \30\13" gets "?Not confirmed" in 8.0.208 and 8.0.209, but
-not in 206 and earlier. This problem too was introduced on Feb 10th by
-changing MINPUT parsing from cmtxt() followed by cksplit() to cmfld() in a
-loop. cmfld() uses setatm() to return its result and of course setatm()
-breaks on \13. Changing setatm() not to do this would break everything else.
-But cmfld() has no arguments that let us tell it to do anything different in
-this case. Changing the API would be a disaster. The only solution is to add
-an "MINPUT ACTIVE" (minputactive) global variable that tells cmfld() to tell
-setatm() not to break on CR. Now MINPUT with braced targets containing CR
-and/or LF works in 209, 206, and 201 (but not 208). ckucmd.c, ckuusr.c,
-ckuus5.c, 15 Mar 2003.
-
-MINPUT n \fjoin(&a) works OK if all the members of \&a[] are text strings, but
-if they are strings of control chars (as above), they don't get separated by
-the spaces. For example in:
-
- dcl \&a[] = "\4\5" "\6\7" xxx
- minput 10 \fjoin(&a)
-
-MINPUT gets two targets: "aaa" and "\4\5 \6\7 xxx". The bug was in the
-cksplit() call in the \fjoin() case of MINPUT: it needed to specify an
-include set consisting of all the control characters except NUL. ckuusr.c,
-16 Mar 2003.
-
-But there's still a problem:
-
- dcl \&a[] = "\4\5\13\10" "\6\7" "xxx"
-
-creates an array whose first member is "^D^E (one doublequote included). But
-if braces are used instead, there's no problem. Same deal as MINPUT: cmfld()
-breaks on CR or LF, thus the end quote is lost. If I set minputactive for
-DECLARE initializers too, that fixes it. Is there any reason not to do this?
-Can't think of any (famous last words)... ckuusr.c, 16 Mar 2003.
-
-Since it has multiple applications, changed the flag's name from minputactive
-to keepallchars. ckucmd.c, ckuus[r5].c, 16 Mar 2003.
-
-\v(exedir) wasn't being set correctly (it included the program name as well
-as the directory). Fixed in getexedir(): ckuus4.c, 16 Mar 2003.
-
-SET CARRIER-WATCH <Esc> "auto matic" (spurious space in supplied keyword).
-Cosmetic only; it still worked. Fixed in setdcd(): ckuus3.c, 16 Mar 2003.
-
-"directory a b c" listed too many files -- all files whose names END WITH a,
-b, or c, rather than the files whose names WERE a, b, or c. Diagnosis: The
-filespec is changed into a pattern: {a,b,c}, which is the correct form. It is
-passed to nzxpand(), which goes through the directory getting filenames and
-sending each one to ckmatch() with the given pattern. ckmatch() receives the
-correct pattern but then prepends a "*" -- that's not right. It's not just
-in filename matching either. The following succeeds when it shouldn't:
-
- if match xxxxc {{a,b,c}} <command>
-
-Changing ckmatch() to not prepend the "*" to each segment fixes the command
-above but breaks lots of others. Running through the "match" torture-test
-script shows the problem occurs only when the {a,b,c} list is the entire
-pattern, and not embedded within a larger pattern. Testing for this case
-fixed the problem. ckmatch(): ckclib.c, 16 Mar 2003.
-
-Fixed FTP MODTIME to not print anything if QUIET ON. ckcftp.c, 16 Mar 2003.
-
-Picked up a new ckuath.c from Jeff, not sure what the changes are. 16 Mar 2003.
-
-Did a few regular and secure builds to make sure I didn't wreck anything.
-
-Changed version number to 209 (final). ckcmai.c, 16 Mar 2003.
-
-Jason Heskett found another bug: if you define a macro FOO inside the
-definition of another macro BAR, and FOO's definition includes an odd number
-of doublequotes (such as 1), FOO's definition absorbs the rest of BAR's
-definition. Example:
-
- def TEST {
- .foo = {X"}
- sho mac foo
- }
- do test
- sho mac foo
-
-Results in:
-
- foo = {X"}, sho mac foo
-
-Diagnosis: the TEST definition becomes:
-
- def TEST .foo = {X"}, sho mac foo
-
-and the macro reader is erroneously treating the doublequote as an open
-quote, and then automatically closes the quote at the end of the definition.
-The error is that a doublequote should be significant only at the beginning of
-a field. But the macro reader isn't a command parser; it doesn't know what
-a field is -- it's just looking for commas and skipping over quoted ones.
-First we have to fix an oversight: SET COMMAND DOUBLEQUOTING OFF should have
-worked here, but it wasn't tested in this case. Fixed in getncm(): ckuus5.c,
-17 Mar 2003.
-
-There are only certain cases where it makes sense to treat doublequotes as
-signicant:
-
- . An open quote must be at the beginning or preceded by a space.
- . A close quote is only at the end or else followed by a space.
-
-This too was fixed in getncm(): ckuus5.c, 17 Mar 2003.
-
-A fix from Jeff SSL/TLS FTP data decoding. ckcftp.c, 18 Mar 2003.
-
-Tried building C-Kermit on a Cray Y-MP with UNICOS 9.0. "int suspend",
-declared in ckcmai.c and used in many modules, conflicts with:
-
- unistd.h:extern int suspend __((int _Category, int _Id));
-
-The "=Dsuspend=xsuspend" trick doesn't work for this; there is no way around
-the conflict other than to rename the variable: ckcmai.c, ckutio.c,
-ckuus[35xy].c. 26 Mar 2003. VMS and K95 not affected.
-
-OK that gets us past ckcmai.c... Then in ckutio.c I had to add a new #ifdef
-around the LFDEVNO setting, because the Cray didn't have mkdev.h. Could not
-find a Cray-specific manifest symbol, so I made a new makefile target (cray9)
-that sets this symbol. Having done this I have no idea what kind of lockfile
-would be created, but I also doubt if anybody dials out from a Cray. The
-binary should run a C90, J90, or Y-MP. makefile, 26 Mar 2003.
-
-Added a target for SCO OSR5.0.7. makefile, ckuver.h, 30 Mar 2003.
-
-Changed since 208:
-makefile ckuver.h ckcmai.c ckclib.c ckcftp.c ckucmd.c ckuus*.c ckutio.c.
-
----8.0.209---
-
-From Mark Sapiro, a fix for the March 17th doubleqote fix, getncm(): ckuus5.c,
-4 Apr 2003.
-
-From Jeff, 29 Apr 2003:
- . Corrected target for HP-UX 11.00 + OpenSSL: makefile,
- . Do not allow WILL AUTH before WONT START_TLS: ckctel.h ckctel.c
- . Add hooks for SFTP and SET/SHOW SFTP: ckcdeb.h ckuusr.h ckuusr.c ckuus3.c
- . Add SKERMIT ckuusr.h ckuusr.c
- . Add ADM-5 terminal emulation: ckuus7.c, ckuus5.c
- . Uncomment and update HELP SET SSH V2 AUTO-REKEY: ckuus2.c
- . Enable IF TERMINAL-MACRO and IF STARTED-FROM-DIALER for C-Kermit: ckuus6.c
- . Fix conflicting NOSCROLL keyword definition: ckuusr.h
- . Set ttname when I_AM_SSH: ckuusy.c
- . Add extended arg parsing for SSH, Rlogin, Telnet: ckuusy.c, ckuus4.c
- . Security updates: ckuath.c, ck_ssl.c
- . Change K95 version number to 2.2.0: ckcmai.c
- . Save K95 term i/o state before executing keyboard macro: ckuus4.c
- . Add tests for SSH Subsystem active during INPUT/OUTPUT/CONNECT: ckuus[45].c
- . Enable K95 SET SSH V2 AUTO-REKEY: ckuus3.c
-
-SFTP and SET SFTP subcommands are implemented up to the case statements.
-
-Files of mine that Jeff hadn't picked up:
- ckuver.h ckcftp.c ckutio.c ckuusx.c (just minor changes for last build-all)
-
-On 4 Jan 2003, SET RECEIVE MOVE-TO was changed to convert is argument to an
-absolute path, which made it impossible to specify a relative path, then
-move to different directories and have it apply relatively to each directory.
-Changed this as follows:
-
- . Parser uses cmtxt() rather than cmdir() so it won't fail at parse time.
- . If path is absolute, we fail at parse time if directory doesn't exist.
- . In reof() we run the the path through xxstring (again, in case deferred
- evaluation of variables is desired) and then, if not null, use it.
- . If the directory doesn't exist, rename() fails and reof() returns -4,
- resulting in a protocol error (this is not a change). We do NOT create
- the directory on the fly.
-
-I also fixed SET SEND/RECEIVE RENAME-TO to parse with cmtxt() rather than
-cmdir(), since it's parsing a text template, not a directory name, e.g.
-"set receive rename-to file-\v(time)-v(date)-\v(pid)". This was totally
-broken, since when I don't know. We don't call xxstring() in this parse, so
-evaluation is always deferred -- I'd better not change this. ckuus7.c,
-ckcfns.c, 1 May 2003.
-
-From Jeff, Sat May 3 14:15:23 2003:
- . Pick up the right isascii definition for K95: ckctel.c
- . malloc... ckuath.c (new safe malloc routines for K95)
- . Add author listing: ckuus5.c
- . SSH Heartbeat support (K95 only): ckuus[23].c
- . Prescan --height and --width to avoid window resizing at startup: ckuusy.c
- . Add checks for fatal() or doexit() called from sysinit(): ckuusx.c
- . Move some K95-specific definitions to ckoker.h: ckcdeb.h
- . Add support for ON_CD macro in zchdir(): ckufio.c
- . Add a command to let FTP client authenticate with SSLv2: ckcftp.c
- . Fix parsing of FTP file facts like "UNIX.mode": ckcftp.c
-
-ON_CD will need some explaining (to be done). It's implemented for Unix,
-VMS, WIndows, and OS/2.
-
-The FTP file facts fix came from first exposure to the new OpenBSD FTP
-server: ftp://ftp7.usa.openbsd.org/pub/os/OpenBSD/3.3/i386/
-The period in "UNIX.mode" caused an erroneous word break, adding junk to
-the filename.
-
-About the malloc changes, Jeff says "K95 is not behaving well in low memory
-environments. I'm not sure that C-Kermit does much better. The program does
-not crash but it certainly does not behave the way the user expects it to.
-I'm beginning to think that any malloc() error should be treated as fatal."
-
-Not visible in these changes because it's in K95-specific modules: Jeff made
-SET ATTRIBUTES OFF and SET ATTRIBUTES DATE OFF apply to XYZMODEM transfers.
-
-From Jeff, 11 May 2003:
- . Add support for SSH Keepalive to relevant SET command (K95): ckuus3.c
- . Reduce max overlapped i/o requests from 30 to 7 (K95): ckuus7.c
- . Don't call sysinit() in fatal(): ckuusx.c.
- . Some new conditionalizations for SSL module: ck_ssl.c
-
-The doublequote-parsing fixes from March and April broke the SWITCH statement,
-which is implemented by internally defining, then executing, a macro. If I
-drop back to the old dumb handling of doublequotes, everything is fixed except
-the problem of March 17th. But can we really expect getncm() to pre-guess
-what the parser is going to do? getncm()'s only job is to find command
-boundaries, which are represented by commas. Commas, however, is needed IN
-commands too. We take a comma literally if it is quoted with \, or is inside
-a matched pair of braces, parens, or doublequotes. It is not unreasonable to
-require a doublequote in a macro definition to be prefixed by \ when it is to
-be taken literally. The proper response to Jason Heskett's complaint of March
-17th should have been to leave the code alone and recommand an appropriate
-form of quoting:
-
- def TEST {
- .foo = {X\"}
- sho mac foo
- }
-
-And this is what I have done. Another reason for sticking with the old method
-is that it's explainable. The "improved" method, even if it worked, would be
-be impossible to explain. Btw, in testing this I noticed that the switch-test
-script made 8.0.201 dump core. Today's version is fine. The problem with
-quoted strings inside of IF {...} clauses and FOR and WHILE loops is fixed
-too. Perhaps "unbroken" would be a better word. ckuus5.c, 11 May 2003.
-
-Vace discovered that FTP MGET /EXCEPT:{... (with an unterminated /EXCEPT list)
-could crash Kermit. Fixed in ckcftp.c, 11 May 2003.
-
-CONTINUE should not affect SUCCESS/FAILURE status. ckuusr.c, 11 May 2003.
-
-Fixed an oversight that goes back 15 years. While \{123} is allowed for
-decimal codes, \x{12} and \o{123} were never handled. ckucmd.c, 11 May 2003.
-
-Added support for Red Hat <baudboy.h> and /usr/sbin/lockdev. Supposedly this
-allows Kermit to be installed without setuid or setgid bits and still be able
-to lock and use the serial device. Compiles and starts, but not tested.
-ckcdeb.h, makefile, ckutio.c, ckuus5.c, 16 May 2003.
-
-From Jeff: FTP ASCII send data to host when FTP /SSL was in use was broken.
-ftp_dpl is set to Clear when FTP /SSL is in use. This was causing the data to
-be written to the socket with send() instead of the OpenSSL routines.
-ckcftp.c, ckuath.c, 21 May 2003.
-
-From Jeff: Stuff for Kerberos 524: ckcdeb.h. Fixes for FTP; "FTP ASCII send
-data did not properly compute the end of line translations. On Unix (and
-similar platforms) the end of line was correct for no character sets but
-incorrect when character sets were specified. On Windows/OS2, the end of line
-was correct when character sets were specified and incorrect when they were
-not. On MAC, both were broken. Also, FTP Send Byte counts were incorrect
-when character sets were specified." ckcftp.c. 17 Jun 2003.
-
-From Jeff: fixes to HTTP /AGENT: and /USER: switch action: ckcnet.c ckuus3.c
-ck_crp.c ckcftp.c ckuus2.c ckuusy.c ckuusr.c ckcnet.h, 21 Jun 2003.
-
-From Jeff: Fix SET DIALER BACKSPACE so it can override a previous SET KEY
-(e.g. from INI file): ckuus7.c. Some SSL/TLS updates: ck_ssl.c. HTTP support
-for VMS and other VMS improvements (e.g. a way to not have to hardwire the
-C-Kermit version number into the build script) from Martin Vorlaender:
-ckcnet.h, ckuus[r3].c, ckcdeb.h, ckvtio.c, ckcnet.c, ckvker.com. Built on
-Solaris (gcc/ansi) and SunOS (cc/k&r). The new VMS script tests the VMS
-version and includes HTTP support only for VMS 6.2 or later. 2 Jul 2003.
-
-Tried to build on our last VMS system but it seems to be dead. Looks like a
-head crash (makes really loud noises, boot says DKA0 not recognized) (fooey, I
-just paid good money to renew the VMS license). Tried building at another
-site with:
-
- Process Software MultiNet V4.3 Rev A-X,
- Compaq AlphaServer ES40, OpenVMS AXP V7.3
- Compaq C V6.4-008 on OpenVMS Alpha V7.3
-
-Had to make a few corrections to ckvker.com. But still, compilation of
-ckcnet.c bombs, indicating that the SELECT definition somehow got lost
-somewhere since the 209 release (i.e. no SELECT type is defined so it falls
-thru to "SELECT is required for this code"). But I don't see anything in
-ckcdeb.h or ckcnet.[ch] that would explain this. Not ckvker.com either
-(putting the old one back gives the same result). OK, I give up, maybe it's
-just that I haven't tried building it on MultiNet recently. What about UCX?
-Aha, builds fine there except for warnings about mlook, dodo, and parser in
-ckvfio.c (because of ON_CD) -- I suppose I have #include <ckucmd.h>... (done)
-Anyhow it builds OK and the HTTP code is active and almost works (HTTP OPEN
-works; HTTP GET seems to succeed but creates an empty file every time). Tried
-building under MultiNet at another installation; same bad result.
-
-OK so why won't it build for MultiNet? Comparing ckcnet.c with the 209
-version, not a single #ifdef or #include is changed. Tried building with
-p3="NOHTTP" -- builds OK, aha. Where's the problem? Not ckcnet.h...
-Not ckcdeb.h... OK I give up, will revisit this next time I get time to
-do anything with the code.
-
-Later Jeff said "Martin did not implement VMS networking for the HTTP code.
-All he did was activate the #define HTTP which happens to work because his
-connections are using SSL/TLS connections. http_inc(), http_tol(), etc have
-no support for VMS networking regardless of whether it is UCX or MULTINET.
-The vast majority of HTTP connections are not secured by SSL/TLS. It makes no
-sense to support HTTP on VMS until someone is willing to either do the work or
-pay have the work done to implement VMS networking in that code base." So the
-fix is to not enable HTTP for VMS after all. Removed the CKHTTP definition
-for VMS from ckcdeb.h, 6 Jul 2003.
-
-Fixed ckvfio.c to #include <ckuusr.h> (instead of <ckucmd.h>) to pick up
-missing prototypes. 6 Jul 2003.
-
-From Arthur Marsh: solaris2xg+openssl+zlib+srp+pam+shadow and the corresponding
-Solaris 7 target. makefile, 6 Jul 2003.
-
-Remove duplicate #includes for <sys/stat.h>, <errno.h>, and <ctype.h> from
-ckcftp.c. 6 Jul 2003.
-
-Add -DUSE_MEMCPY to Motorola SV/68 targets because of shuffled #includes in
-ckcftp.c. 8 Jul 2003.
-
-From Jeff: Fix problems mixing SSL and SRP without Kerberos. Plus a few minor
-#define comment changes and a reshuffling of #defines in ckcdeb.h to allow me
-to build on X86 Windows without Kerberos. ckcdeb.h, ck_crp.c, ckuath.c,
-10 Jul 2003.
-
-From Jeff: updated ckuat2.h and ckuath.c, 29 Jul 2003.
-
-Mats Peterson noticed that a very small Latin-1 file would be incorrectly
-identified as UCS-2 by scanfile(). Fixed in ckuusx.c, 29 Jul 2003.
-
-Fixed ACCESS macro definition to account for the fact that FIND is now a
-built-in command. ckermit.ini, 30 Jul 2003.
-
-From Jeff: Fix for typo in urlparse() (svc/hos): ckuusy.c, 18 Aug 2003.
-
-From Jeff: Redhat9 makefile targets (needed for for OpenSSL 0.9.7):
-makefile, 19 Aug 2003.
-
-GREP /NOLIST and /COUNT did too much magic, with some undesirable fallout:
-"GREP /NOLIST /COUNT:x args" printed "file:count" for each file. "GREP
-/COUNT:x /NOLIST args" did not print "file:count", but neither did it set the
-count variable. Removed the magic. Also one of the GREP switches,
-/LINENUMBERS, was out of order. Fixed in ckuus6.c, 20 Aug 2003.
-
-From Jeff: "Reorganizing code to enable building with different subsets of
-options; a few typos corrected as well." ckcdeb.h, ckuver.h (for RH9),
-ckcnet.c, ckuus7.c, ckuus3.c: 24 Aug 2003.
-
-Scanfile misidentified a big PDF file as text because the first 800K of it
-*was* text (most other PDF files were correctly tagged as binary). Fixed
-by adding a check for the PDF signature at the beginning of the file.
-scanfile(): ckuusx.c, 25 Aug 2003.
-
-Ditto for PostScript files, but conservatively. Signature at beginning of
-file must begin with "%!PS-Ado". If it's just "%!" (or something nonstandard
-like "%%Creator: Windows PSCRIPT") we do a regular scan. Also added "*.ps"
-to all binary filename patterns. ckuusx.c, 4 Sep 2003.
-
-Ditto (but within #ifndef NOPCLSCAN) for PCL (<ESC>E) and PJL (<ESC>%) files,
-but no binpatterns (note: ".PCL" is the extension for TOPS-20 EXEC scripts).
-ckuusx.c, 4 Sep 2003.
-
-Added comments about OpenSSL 0.9.7 to all linux+openssl targets.
-makefile, 4 Sep 2003.
-
-From Jeff: Added - #define ALLOW_KRB_3DES_ENCRYPT. When this symbol is defined
-at compilation Kermit will allow non-DES session keys to be used during Telnet
-Auth. These session keys can then be used for Telnet Encrypt. The reason
-this is not compiled on by default is that the MIT Kerberos Telnet does not
-follow the RFC for constructing keys for ENCRYPT DES when the keys are longer
-than 8 bytes in length. ckuath.c, ckuus5.c, 4 Sep 2003.
-
-"ftp mget a b c" succeeded if one or more of the files did not exist, even
-with "set ftp error-action proceed". This is because the server's NLST file
-list does not include any files that don't exist, so the client never even
-tries to get them. Fortunately, the way the code is structured, this one was
-easy to fix. ckcftp.c, 14 Sep 2003.
-
-From Jeff: Corrected code in ckcnet.c to ensure that Reverse DNS Lookups are
-not performed if tcp_rdns is OFF. Fixed ck_krb5_getrealm() to actually return
-the realm of the credentials cache and not the default realm specified in the
-krb5.conf file. Previously krb5_cc_get_principal() was not being called.
-Fixed ck_krb5_is_tgt_valid() to test the TGT in the current ccache and not the
-TGT constructed from the default realm. ckcnet.c, ckuath.c, 14 Sep 2003.
-
-Marco Bernardi noticed that IF DIRECTORY could produce a false positive if
-the argument directory had previously been referenced but then removed. This
-is because of the clever isdir() cache that was added to speed up recursion
-through big directory trees. Changed IF DIRECTORY to make a second check
-(definitive but more expensive) if isdir() succeeds, and changed the
-directory-deleting routine, ckmkdir(), to flush the directory cache (UNIX
-only -- this also should be done in K95 but it's not critical). This was
-done by adding a routine, clrdircache() to ckufio.c, which sets prevstat
-to -1 and prevpath[0] to NUL. ckcfn3.c, ckuus6.c, ckufio.c, 18 Sep 2003.
-
-Marco reported the second fix still didn't work for him (even though it did
-for me). Rather than try to figure out why, I concluded that the directory
-cache is just not safe: a directory found a second ago might have been deleted
-or renamed not only by Kermit but by some other process. Why did I add this
-in the first place? The log says:
-
- Some debug logs showed that isdir() is often called twice in a row on the
- same file. Rather than try to sort out clients, I added a 1-element cache
- to Unix isdir(). ckufio.c, 24 Apr 2000.
-
-Experimentation with DIR and DIR /RECURSIVE does not show this happening at
-all. So I #ifdef'd out the directory cache (see #ifdef ISDIRCACHE in ckufio.c;
-ISDIRCACHE is not defined) and backed off the previous changes: ckufio.c,
-ckcfn3.c, ckuus6.c, 28 Sep 2003.
-
-From Jeff: Replace the compile time ALLOW_KRB_3DES_ENCRYPT with a run-time
-command SET TELNET BUG AUTH-KRB5-DES which defaults to ON: ckctel.[ch],
-ckuus[234].c, ck_crp.c, ckuath.c. 4 Oct 2003.
-
-Allow DIAL RETRIES to be any positive number, and catch negative ones.
-Also added code to check for atoi() errors (e.g. truncation). At least on
-some platforms (e.g. Solaris) atoi() is supposed to set errno, but it
-doesn't. ckuus3.c, ckucmd.c, 4 Oct 2003.
-
-Added /DEFAULT: to ASK-class commands (ASK, ASKQ, GETOK):
-
- . For popups: no way to send defaults to popup_readtext() or popup_readpass().
- . For GUI ASK[Q], pass default to gui_txt_dialog().
- . For GUI GETOK, convert "yes" "ok" or "no" default to number for uq_ok().
- . For Text GETOK, add default to cmkey().
- . For Text ASK[Q], add default to cmtxt().
- . For GETC, GETKEY, and READ: no changes.
-
-GETOK, ASK, and ASKQ with /TIMEOUT: no longer fail when the timer goes off
-if a /DEFAULT was supplied. The GUI functions (uq_blah) don't seem to
-support timeouts. Only the text version has been tested. ckuus[26].c,
-4 Oct 2003.
-
-From Jeff: add /DEFAULT: for popups. ckuus6.c. 6 Oct 2003.
-
-Change SET DIAL INTERVAL to be like SET DIAL RETRIES. ckuus[34].c, 6 Oct 2003.
-
-Added target for HP-UX 10/11 + OpenSSL built with gcc, from Chris Cheney.
-Makefile, 12 Oct 2003.
-
-From Jeff, 6 Nov 2003:
- . #ifdef adjustments: ckcftp.c, ckcdeb.h
- . Fix spurious consumption of first byte(s) on Telnet connection: ckctel.c
- . Another HP PJL test for scanfile: ckuusx.c.
- . K95: Recognize DG4xx protected fields in DG2xx emulation: ckuus7.c.
- . Add SSLeay version display to SHOW AUTH command: ckuus7.c
- . Improved SET MOUSE CLEAR help text: ckuus2.c.
- . Improved Kverbs help text: ckuus2.c (+ new IBM-3151 Kverbs).
- . Some changes to ck_ssl.c, ckuath.c.
-
-From PeterE, 10 Nov 2003:
- . Improved HP-UX 10/11 makefile targets for OpenSSL.
- . #ifdef fix for OpenSSL on HP-UX: ck_ssl.c.
-
-Another new makefile from PeterE with improved and integrated HP-UX targets.
-12 Nov 2003.
-
-A couple fixes to the solaris9g+krb5+krb4+openssl+shadow+pam+zlib target
-from Jeff. Added a solaris9g+openssl+shadow+pam+zlib target. makefile,
-21 Nov 2003.
-
-From Jeff, 30 Nov 2003:
- . Fix SEND /MOVE-TO: ckuusr.c.
- . Fix K95 SET TITLE to allow quotes/braces around text: ckuus7.c.
- . Improved "set term autodownload ?" response: ckuus5.c.
- . Fix SHOW FEATURES to specify the protocol for encryption: ckuus5.c
- . Make {SEND, RECEIVE} {MOVE-TO, RENAME-TO} work for XYZMODEM (K95 only).
-
-From Jeff: 7 Jan 2004:
- . At one point Frank started to add a timer parameter to the
- uq_txt() function but he only did it for the non-ANSI
- compilers. I added it for the ANSI compilers, fixed the
- prototypes and provided a default value easily changed
- DEFAULT_UQ_TIMEOUT: ckcker.h, ckuus[36].c, ck_ssl.c, ckcftp.c, ckuath.c.
- . Fixed SET TERMINAL DEBUG ON (typo in variable name): ckuus7.c.
- . Fixed BEEP INFORMATION; previously it made no sound, now uses
- MB_ICONQUESTION. ckuusx.c.
-
-From Ian Beckwith <ian@nessie.mcc.ac.uk> (Debianization), 7 Jan 2004:
- . Search dir/ckermit for docs, as well as dir/kermit in cmdini(): ckuus5.c.
- . New linux+krb5+krb4+openssl+shadow+pam target (kitchen sink minus SRP,
- which Debian does not distribute): makefile.
- ? Mangles the DESTDIR support in makefile to install into a staging area:
- makefile (I didn't take this one yet).
-
-Updated copyright notices for 2004, all modules. 7 Jan 2004.
-
-Added INPUT /NOMATCH, allowing INPUT to be used for a fixed amount of time
-without attempting to match any text or patterns, so it's no longer
-necessary to "input 600 STRING_THAT_WILL_NEVER_COME". If /NOMATCH is
-included, INPUT succeeds if the timeout expires, with \v(instatus) = 1
-(meaning "timed out"); fails upon interruption or i/o error. ckuusr.h,
-ckuus[r24].c, 7 Jan 2004.
-
-Added SET INPUT SCALE-FACTOR <float>. This scales all INPUT timeouts by the
-given factor, allowing time-sensitive scripts to be adjusted to changing
-conditions such as congested networks or different-speed modems without
-having to change each INPUT-class command. This affects only those timeouts
-that are given in seconds, not as wall-clock times. Although the scale
-factor can have a fractional part, the INPUT timeout is still an integer.
-Added this to SHOW INPUT, and added a \v(inscale) variable for it.
-ckuusr.h, ckuus[r257].c, 7 Jan 2004.
-
-undef \%a, \fverify(abc,\%a) returns 0, which makes it look as if \%a is a
-string composed of a's, b's, and/or c's, when in fact it contains nothing.
-Changed \fverify() to return -1 in this case. ckuus4.c, 12 Jan 2004.
-
-\fcode(xxx) returned an empty string if its argument string was empty. This
-makes it unsafe to use in arithmetic or boolean expressions. Changed it to
-return 0 if its argument was missing, null, or empty. ckuus4.c, 12 Jan 2004.
-
-Updated \verify() and \fcode() help text. ckuus2.c, 12 Jan 2004.
-
-While setting up IKSD, Ian Beckwith noticed that including the --initfile:
-option caused Kermit to start parsing its own Copyright string as if it were
-the command line, and eventually crash. I couldn't reproduce on Solaris /
-Sparc but I could in Linux / i386 (what Ian is using) -- a change from Jeff
-on 28 Apr 2003 set the command-line arg pointer to a literal empty string in
-prescan() about line 1740 of of ckuus4.c; the pointer is incremented next
-time thru the loop, resulting in random memory being referenced. Fixed by
-setting the pointer to NULL instead of "". ckuus4.c, 12 Jan 2004.
-
-declare \&a[999999999999999] would dump core on some platforms. atoi()
-or whatever would truncate the dimension to maxint. When we add 1 to the
-result, we get a negative number, which is used as an index, loop test, etc.
-Fixed both dodcl() and dclarray() to check for (n+1 < 0). ckuus[r5].c,
-12 Jan 2004.
-
-Unix zchki() would fail on /dev/tty, which is unreasonable. This prevented
-FOPEN /READ from reading from the terminal. zchki() already allowed for
-/dev/null, so I added /dev/tty to the list of specials. Ditto for FOPEN
-/WRITE and zchko(). ckufio.c 13 Jan 2004.
-
-Added untabify() routine to ckclib.[ch], 13 Jan 2004.
-Added FREAD /TRIM and /UNTABIFY. ckuus[27].c, 13 Jan 2004.
-Added \funtabify(). ckuusr.h, ckuus[24].c, 13 Jan 2004.
-
-Dat Nguyen noticed that (setq u 'p') followed by (u) dumped core. This was
-caused by an over-clever optimization that skipped mallocs for short
-literals, but then went on later to try to free one that hadn't been
-malloc'd. Fixed in dosexp(): ckuus3.c, 14 Jan 2004.
-
-Catch another copyright date. ckuus5.c, 14 Jan 2004.
-
-Fixed SWITCH to work even when SET COMMAND DOUBLEQUOTE OFF (from Mark
-Sapiro). ckuus5.c, 15 Jan 2004.
-
-Changed version to 8.0.211 so scripts can test for recently added features.
-ckcmai.c, 15 Jan 2004.
-
-Fixed a glitch in K95 "help set port". ckuus2.c, 20 Jan 2004.
-
-Fix from Jeff: Connections to a TLS-aware protocol which require a reconnect
-upon certificate verification failure could not reconnect if the connection
-was initiated from the command line or via a URL. ckctel.c ckcmai.c
-ckuusr.c ckuus7.c ckuusy.c, 20 Jan 2004.
-
-From Alex Lewin: makefile target and #ifdef for Mac OS X 10.3 (Panther):
-makefile, ckcnet.c, 7 Feb 2004.
-
-Added KFLAGS to sco32v507 targets to make PTY and SSH commands work. The
-same flags could probably also be added to earlier OSR5 targets but they
-have not been tested there. makefile, 7 Feb 2004.
-
-Checked a complaint that "LOCAL &a" did not make array \&a[] local. Indeed
-it did not, and can not. You have to use the full syntax in the LOCAL
-command, "LOCAL \&a[]", or else it doesn't know it's not a macro named &a.
-7 Feb 2004.
-
-Fixed some confusion in creating IKSD database file and temp-file names.
-I was calling zfnqfp() without remembering that the path member of the
-returned struct included the filename, so to get just the directory name,
-I needed to strip the filename from the right. ckuusy.c, 2 Mar 2004.
-
-New ckuath.c, ck_ssl.c from Jeff. 2 Mar 2004.
-
-Updated Jeff's affiliation in VERSION command text. ckuusr.c, 2 Mar 2004.
-
-Designation changed from Dev.00 to Beta.01. ckcmai.c, 2 Mar 2004.
-
-Fixed zrename() syslogging -- it had success and failure reversed.
-Beta.02: ckufio.c, 4 Mar 2004.
-
-Problem: when accessing IKSD via a kermit:// or iksd:// URL, and a user ID
-is given but no password, doxarg() set the password to "" instead of leaving
-it NULL, but all the tests in dourl() are for NULL. Fixed in doxarg():
-ckuusy.c, 5 Mar 2004.
-
-The logic in dourl() about which macro to construct (login and connect,
-login and get directory listing, or login and fetch a file) was a bit off,
-so all three cases were not handled. ckcmai.c, 5 Mar 2004.
-
-Trial Beta builds:
- . HP-UX B.11.11 PA-RISC
- . HP-UX B.11.23 IA64
- . Tru64 4.0G Alpha
- . Tru64 5.1B Alpha
- . Debian 3.0 i386
- . Red Hat ES 2.1 i386
- . Slackware 9.1 i386
- . VMS 7.3-1 Alpha + UCX 5.3
- . VMS 7.3-1 Alpha no TCP/IP
- . VMS 7.3 Alpha MultiNet 4.3 A-X
- . SCO UnixWare 7.1.4 i386
- . SCO OSR5.0.7 i386
- . Solaris 9 Sparc
-
-Fixed compiler warning in doxarg() caused by typo (NULL instead of NUL) in
-the 5 March doxarg() edit. ckuusy.c, 9 Mar 2004.
-
-IKSD (kermit://) command-line URLs did not work right if the client had
-already preauthenticated with Kerberos or somesuch because they tried to log
-in again with REMOTE LOGIN. The macros constructed in doxarg() needed to
-check \v(authstate) before attempting REMOTE LOGIN. ckcmai.c, 10 Mar 2004.
-
-Added ckuker.nr to x.sh (ckdaily upload) and updated ckuker.nr with current
-version number and dates. 10 Mar 2004.
-
-Replaced hardwired references to /usr/local in makefile with $(prefix)
-(which defaults to /usr/local, but can be overridden on the command line),
-suggested by Nelson Beebe for use with Configure. 10 Mar 2004.
-
-From Nelson Beebe: In the Kermit makefile in the install target commands,
-line 981 reads:
-
- cp $(BINARY) $(DESTDIR)$(BINDIR)/kermit || exit 1;\
-
-Could you please add this line before it:
-
- rm -f $(DESTDIR)$(BINDIR)/kermit;\
-
-Some sites (mine included) keep multiple versions of software around,
-with hard links between $(prefix)/progname and $(prefix)/progname-x.y.z.
-Failure to remove the $(prefix)/progname at "make install" time then
-replaces the old $(prefix)/progname-x.y.z with the new one, destroying
-an old version that the site wanted to be preserved. makefile, 10 Mar 2004.
-
-Minor syntax and typo fixes (mostly prototypes): ckcdeb.h, ckcfns.c,
-ckclib.c, ckufio.c, ckuusr.h, ckuusx.c, 10 Mar 2004. (I still have a few
-more to do.)
-
-Added CC=$(CC) CC2=$(CC2) to many (but not all) makefile targets that
-reference other makefile targets. On some platforms (notably AIX, Solaris,
-SunOS) there are specific targets for different compilers, so I skipped
-those. makefile, 10 Mar 2004.
-
-Added error checking to kermit:// URL macros, so they don't plow ahead
-after the connection is closed. ckcmai.c, 11 Mar 2004.
-
-Added FreeBSD 4.9 and 5.1 targets (only the herald is affected).
-makefile, ckuver.h, 11 Mar 2004.
-
-Added "LIBS=-lcrypt" to bsd44 targets since nowadays crypt is almost always
-unbundled from libc. Also added explanatory notes. makefile, 11 Mar 2004.
-
-Changed MANDIR to default to $(manroot)/man/man1, and manroot to default
-to $(prefix). More adding of CC=$(CC) clauses: {Free,Net,Open}BSD, 4.4BSD.
-makefile, 11 Mar 2004.
-
-Miscellaneous cleanups: ckuusx.c, ckcnet.c, ckufio.c, 11 Mar 2004.
-
-Corrected the check in the linux target to see if /usr/include/crypt.h
-exists, and if so to define HAVE_CRYPT_H, which is used in ckcdeb.h to
-#include <crypt.h> to get the prototype for crypt() and prevent bogus
-conversions on its return type on 64-bit platforms (the previous test wasn't
-quite right and the resulting symbol wasn't spelled right). makefile,
-12 Mar 2004.
-
-From Jeff, 14 Mar 2004:
- . Initialize localuidbuf[] in tn_snenv(): ckctel.c.
- . Remove remote-mode checks in hupok() for K95G only (why?): ckuus3.c.
- . Add help text for new K95-only TYPE /GUI switches: ckuus2.c.
- . TYPE /GUI parsing, ...: ckuusr.c.
- . TYPE /GUI action, dotype(): ckuus6.c
- . Change Jeff's affiliation: most modules.
-
-20 Mar 2004: Looked into adding long file support, i.e. handling files more
-than 2GB (or 4GB) long. Discovered very quickly this would be a major
-project. Each platform has a different API, or environment, or transition
-plan, or whatever -- a nightmare to handle in portable code. At the very
-least we'll need to convert a lot of Kermit variables from long or unsigned
-long to some new Kermit type, which in turn is #defined or typedef'd
-appropriately for each platform (to off_t or size_t or whatever). Then we
-have to worry about the details of open() vs fopen(); printf() formats (%lld
-vs %Ld vs %"PRId64"...), platforms like HP-UX where you might have to use
-different APIs for different file systems on the same computer, etc. We'll
-need to confront this soon, but let's get a good stable 8.0.211 release out
-first! Meanwhile, for future reference, here are a few articles:
-
-General: http://freshmeat.net/articles/view/709/
-Linux: http://www.ece.utexas.edu/~luo/linux_lfs.html
-HP-UX: http://devrsrc1.external.hp.com/STK/partner/lg_files.pdf
-Solaris: http://wwws.sun.com/software/whitepapers/wp-largefiles/largefiles.pdf
-
-Looked into FTP timeouts. It appears I can just call empty() (which is
-nothing more than a front end for select()) with the desired timeout before
-any kind of network read. If it returns <= 0, we have a timeout. This is
-not quite the same as using alarm() / signal() around a recv() (which could
-get stuck) but alarm() / signal() are not not used in the FTP module and are
-not naturally portable to Windows, but select() is already in use in the FTP
-module for both Unix and Windows. This form of timeout could be used
-portably for both command response and data reads. What about writes to the
-command or data socket? They can get stuck for hours and hours without
-returning too, but the select() approach won't help here -- we need the
-actual send() or recv() to time out, or be wrapped in an alarm()/signal()
-kind of mechanism. But if we can do that for sends, we can also do it for
-receives. Better check with Jeff before I start programming anything.
-20 Mar 2004.
-
-Later: Decided to postpone the above two projects (ditto IPv6) until after
-8.0.211 is released because both will have major impacts on portability.
-Grumble: all i/o APIs should have been designed from the beginning with a
-timeout parameter. To this day, hardly any have this feature.
-
-3-4 Apr 2004: More 8.0.211 Beta.02+ test builds:
-
- . FreeBSD 3.3
- . FreeBSD 4.4
- . Linux Debian 2.1
- . Linux RH 6.1
- . Linux RH 7.1
- . Linux RH 7.2
- . Linux RH 9 (with 84 different combinations of feature selection)
- . Linux SuSE 6.4
- . Linux SuSE 7.0
- . NetBSD 1.4.1
- . NetBSD 1.5.2
- . OpenBSD 2.5
- . OpenBSD 3.0
- . QNX 4.25
- . SCO UnixWare 2.1.3
- . SCO UnixWare 7.1.4
- . SCO OpenServer 5.0.7
- . SCO XENIX 2.3.4 (no TCP)
-
-Changes needed: None.
-
-Problem: SCO XENIX 2.3.4 network build failed in the FTP module with
-header-file syntax and conflicting-definitions trouble. I'm not going to
-try to fix it; 8.0.209 built OK with FTP, so we'll just keep that one
-available.
-
-Got access to VMS 8.1 on IA64. Building the nonet version of C-Kermit
-required minor modifications to ckvvms.h, ckv[ft]io.c, and ckvcon.c, to
-account for a third architecture. Also to SHOW FEATURES in ckuus5.c. Once
-that was done, the UCX 5.5 version built OK too. Starts OK, makes Telnet
-connection OK, sends files. Has some obvious glitches though -- "stat"
-after a file transfer reports 0 elapsed time (in fact it was 00:09:48) and
-1219174400 cps (when in fact it was 10364). This doesn't happen on the
-Alpha. Btw, the IA64 binary is twice as big as the Alpha one. Changed
-to Beta.03. 5 Apr 2004.
-
-Fixed the ckdaily script to include the makefile and man page in the Zip
-file (they were not included because the Zip file was intended mainly for
-VMS users, but some Unix users prefer Zip to tar.gz). 6 Apr 2004.
-
-Traced problems in VMS/IA64 statistics report to rftimer()/gftimer() in
-ckvtio.c, which use sys$ and lib$ calls to figure elapsed time. These work
-on VAX and Alpha but not IA64. Sent a report to the chief engineer of the
-IA64 VMS port; he says it's probably a bug in VMS 8.1 (which is not a real
-release); he'll make sure it's fixed in 8.2. As an experiment, tried
-swapping in the Unix versions of these routines (which call gettimeofday()
-etc). They seem work just fine (it hung a couple times but I think that's
-because the underlying system hung too; trying it later on a new connection,
-it was fine; however I noticed a BIG discrepancy in throughput between
-sending and receiving). Moved definitions for VMS64BIT and VMSI64 to
-ckcdeb.h so all modules can use them and added them to the SHOW FEATURES
-display. Added VMSV80 definition to build procedure. Beta.03+. ckcdeb.h,
-ckcuus5.c, ckcvvms.h, ckvtio.c, ckvker.com, 6 Apr 2004.
-
-While doing the build-all, I noticed the VMS version did not build with
-Multinet or older UCX versions, always with the same errors -- undeclared
-variables, undefined symbols, all TCP/IP related. This didn't happen a
-couple weeks ago... Somehow the order of #includes was messed up --
-ckuusr.h depended on symbols that are defined in ckcnet.h, but ckcnet.h
-was being included after ckuusr.h... this was compounded by two missing
-commas in ckvker.com. 11 Apr 2004.
-
-Removed Beta designation, released as 8.0.211, 10 Apr 2004.
-
-I had somehow lost the edit to ckutio.c that changed the UUCP lockfile for
-Mac OS X from /var/spool/uucp to /var/spool/lock. So I slipped it in and
-re-uploaded version 8.0.211. You can tell the difference because SHOW
-VERSIONS has 17 Apr 2004 for the Communications I/O module. Also the 10.3
-executable now has a designer banner: "Mac OS X 10.3". makefile, ckuver.h,
-ckutio.c, ckuus[45].c, 17 Apr 2004.
-
----8.0.211---
-
-Removed "wermit" from "make clean" (how did it get there?). makefile.
-
-From Jeff, applied 10 May 2004.
- . Rearrange #ifdefs that define OS/2-only features. ckcdeb.h.
- . Fix two strncat()s that should have been ckstrncat()s. ckuus7.c.
- . Fix two strncat()s that should have been ckstrncat()s. ckuus4.c.
- . Fix one strncat(). ckcfns.c.
- . SET FTP CHAR ON used backwards byte order when output to screen. ckcfns.c.
- . Fix two strncat()s. ckuus3.c.
- . Add SET NETWORK TYPE NAMED-PIPE for K95. ckuus3.c.
- . Add "No active connections" message to hupok(). ckuus3.c.
- . Fix many strncat()s. ckcnet.c.
- . Fix some strncat()s. ckcftp.c
- . Make FTP port unsigned short for 16383 < port < 65536. ckcftp.c.
- . Improvements to FTP USER command. ckcftp.c.
- . Fix FEAT parsing to allow for various forms of whitespace. ckcftp.c.
-
-S-Expression (AND FOO BAR) would not short-circuit if FOO's value was 0,
-even though short-circuiting code has been there since Day 1. Similarly for
-(OR BAR FOO). Turns out the first operand was a special case that bypassed
-the short-circuit check. Fixed in dosexp(): ckuus3.c, 10 May 2004.
-
-Red Hat 7.3 (and maybe others) <baudboy.h> referenced open() without first
-ensuring it was declared. The declaration is in <fcntl.h>, which is after
-<baudboy.h> in ckutio.c series of #includes. Made a special case for this.
-ckutio.c (see comments), 10 May 2004.
-
-If the local Kermit's parity is set to SPACE and then a file arrives via
-autodownload, automatic parity detection improperly switches it to NONE.
-Fixed in rpack() by switching parity automatically only if parchk() returns
-> 0 (rather than > -1), since NONE and SPACE are indistinguishable. A
-bigger problem still remains: autodownload does not work at all if the
-sender is using actual parity bits (even, odd, or mark) and the receiver's
-parity is NONE. ckcfn2.c, 10 May 2004.
-
-When a DIAL MACRO is defined and the phone number is comprised of more than
-one "word" (i.e. contains spaces), the dial macro loses the second and
-subsequent words after the first call. Fixed in xdial() by inserting quotes
-around phone number before passing it to xdial(). ckuus6.c, 10 May 2004.
-
-DIAL MACRO fix was not right; the quotes were kept as part of the phone
-number and sent to the modem. dodo() pokes its argument to separate the
-macro argument string into its component arguments. xdial() is called
-repeatedly on the same string, so after the first time, a NUL has been
-deposited after the first word of the telephone number. The fix is to have
-xdial() create a pokeable copy of its argument string before calling
-dodo(dial-macro,args...). It might seem odd that dodo pokes its argument,
-but making copies would be would be prohibitive in space and time.
-ckuus6.c, 23 May 2004.
-
-FTP CD did not strip braces or quotes from around its argument. Fixed in
-doftprmt(): ckcftp.c, 23 May 2004.
-
-Added client side of REMOTE MESSAGE/RMESSAGE/RMSG: ckuus[r27].c, 23 May 2004.
-
-Server side of REMOTE MESSAGE: ckcpro.w, 23 May 2004.
-
-From Dave Sneddon: an updated CKVKER.COM containing a fix where the
-COMPAQ_SSL symbol was not defined but later referenced which generated an
-undefined symbol error. ckvker.com, 5 Jan 2005.
-
-From Andy Tanenbaum (28 May 2005):
- . Fix an errant prototype in ckcker.h and ckucmd.h - () instead of (void).
- . Add support for MINIX 3.0. makefile, ckutio.c, ckufio.c, ckuver.h.
-
-Fixed messed-up sndhlp() call which apparently had been jiggered to
-compensate for the bad prototype which has now been fixed, ckcpro.w,
-12 Jun 2005.
-
-From Jeff (12 June 2005):
- . Security updates. ck_ssl.c, ck_crp.c, ckuath.c.
- . Fix bug in K95 SET PRINTER CHARACTER-SET. ckuus3.c.
- . Add printer character-set to K95 SHOW PRINTER display. ckuus5,c
- . Add SET MSKERMIT FILE-RENAMING to K95. ckuus7.c, ckuusr.h.
- . Add help for K95 SET MSKERMIT. ckuus2.c.
- . Add SET GUI CLOSE to K95. ckuusr.h, ckuus2.c, ckuus3.c
- . Add help text for K95 SET GUI MENUBAR and TOOLBAR. ckuus2.c.
- . Add --noclose command-line option for K95. ckuusy.c
- . Add PAM support for Mac OS X. ckufio.c.
- . Add GSSAPI support for Mac OS X. ckcftp.c.
- . Pick up more URL options. ckcker.h, ckuusy.c.
- . Fix bug in delta-time calculation across year boundary. ckucmd.c.
- . Add Secure Endpoints to copyright notices. ckcmai.c.
- . Fix FTP HELP to override unverbose setting. ckcftp.c.
- . Fix assorted minor typos.
-
-From Matthias Kurz: automatic herald generation for NetBSD 2.0 and later,
-"make netbsd2". ckuver.h, makefile, 12 Jun 2005.
-
-Added SET TERMINAL LF-DISPLAY, like CR-DISPLAY but for linefeed rather than
-carriage return. ckuusr.h, ckuus[257x].c, 12 Jun 2005.
-
-Made a command-line option --unbuffered to do what the -DNONOSETBUF
-compile-time option does, i.e. force unbuffered console i/o. Unix only.
-ckuusr.h, ckuusy.c, ckutio.c, 12 Jun 2005.
-
-Fixed getiact() (which displays TERM IDLE-ACTION setting) to display
-space as \{32}. ckuus7.c, 12 Jun 2005.
-
-Added LMV as a synonym for LRENAME, which is itself a synonym for LOCAL
-RENAME. ckuusr.c, 12 Jun 2005.
-
-Put HELP SET TERMINAL DG-UNIX-MODE text where it belonged. ckuus2.c,
-12 Jun 2005.
-
-Added IF LINK (Unix only) to test if a filename is a symlink. Uses the most
-simpleminded possible method, calls readlink() to see if it succeeds or fails.
-No other method is dependable across different Unixes. This code should be
-portable because I already use readlink() elsewhere within exactly the same
-#ifdefs. ckufio.c, ckuus2.c, ckuus6.c, 12 Jun 2005.
-
-Fixed a bug in which \fdir() wouldn't work when its argument was the nonwild
-name of a directory file. zxpand(): ckufio.c, 12 Jun 2005.
-
-Made \fdirectory() a synonym for \fdirectories(). Made \fdir() an
-acceptable abbreviation for these, even though it clashes with \fdirname(),
-which still works as before. ckuus4.c, 12 Jun 2005.
-
-Added the long-needed \flopx() function, to return rightmost pieces of
-strings, such as file extensions. \fstripx() and \flopx() are the
-orthogonal functions we need to pick filenames apart from the right:
-\stripx(foo.tar.gz) = foo.tar; flopx(foo.tar.gz) = gz. ckuusr.h, ckuusr.c,
-ckuus2.c, 12 Jun 2005.
-
-Removed reference to defunct fax number, ckcmai.c, 12 Jun 2005.
-
-Added -DHAVE_PTMX to linux+krb5+openssl+zlib+shadow+pam. From Timothy Folks.
-makefile, 12 Jun 2005.
-
-Built on Solaris 9 and NetBSD 2.0.
-
-From Jeff: New build target for Mac OS X 10.3 with Kerberos 5 and SSL.
-makefile, 14 Jun 2005.
-
-Fixed error in ckuver.h NetBSD #ifdefs. 15 Jun 2005.
-
-Fixed SET TERMINAL IDLE-ACTION OUTPUT to work as documented, namely if the
-output string is empty, to send a NUL. Previously there was no way to make
-it send a NUL. ckuus7.c, 15 Jun 2005.
-
-Suppose (in Unix, for example) a filename contains wildcard characters, such
-as {abc}.txt. When referring to such a file (e.g. in a SEND command), these
-characters can be quoted, e.g. \{abc\}.txt. But if the file list has been
-obtained programmatically, e.g. stored in an array, there is no way, short
-of tedious, complicated, and error-prone string processing, to reference the
-file. For this we need a way to disable wildcard processing. I added { ON,
-OFF } choices for the SET WILD and SHOW FILE commands: ckuusr.h, ckuus[234].c.
-{ ON, OFF } turns wildcarding off and on without affecting the { KERMIT,
-SHELL } agent choice; it does this by setting a new and separate global
-variable, wildena. Added semantics to ckufio.c. Crude but effective. It
-might have been more Unixlike to add Yet Another form of quoting but we
-have enough of that already (later maybe I'll add a \function() for this).
-Needs to be propogated to Windows and VMS. 15 Jun 2005.
-
-Improved and fixed typos in HELP WILDCARD and HELP PATTERN. ckuus2.c,
-15 Jun 2005.
-
-The GREP command, and probably anything else that uses ckmatch() for pattern
-matching, failed on patterns like */[0-3]*.html. The [a-b] handler, when
-failing to match at the current position, neglected to back up the pattern
-and try again on the remainder of the string. I also fixed another case, in
-which matching a literal string a*b?c against the pattern a[*?]*[?*]c caused
-ckmatch() to recurse until it blew up. ckclib.c, 16 Jun 2005.
-
-Added builds and designer banner for Solaris 10. makefile, ckuver.h,
-27 Jun 2005.
-
-Defined CKHTTP for NetBSD, the HTTP code builds and works fine there.
-ckcdeb.h, 2 Jul 2005.
-
-Added #ifndef OSF40..#endif around definition of inet_aton() in ck_ssl()
-to allow building in Tru64. Added tru64-51b+openssl to makefile.
-15 Jul 2005.
-
-HTTP GET would fail if the URL contained any metacharacters, no matter how
-much you quoted them. Although it uses cmfld() to parse the (partial) URL,
-it then uses cmofi() to get the output filename, which by default is the
-"filename" from the URL, which might be something like "rankem.asp?id=1639".
-cmofi() refuses to accept unquoted metacharacters in "filenames" and that's
-what happens in this case if the output filename is not specified. Worked
-around this by disabling wildcard processing around HTTP GET using the new
-"wildena" variable from June 15th. ckuusr.c, 18 Jul 2005.
-
-Fixed the June 16th fix to the pattern matcher. I fixed a real problem, but
-I made an unrelated optimization that introduced new ones. ckclib.c,
-18 Jul 2005.
-
-Added missing help text for \fb64encode() and \fb64decode(). ckuus2.c,
-18 Jul 2005.
-
-Changed SET WILD OFF help text to warn that this setting prevents the
-creation of backup files (later I'll have to see if something more useful
-can be done about this). ckuus2.c, 18 Jul 2005.
-
-Built OK on Mac OS X 10.4.2 using macosx103 target (but with some
-"signedness" warnings in ckcnet.c and ckcftp.c). Built on Unixware 7.1.4
-with uw7 target. 27-28 Jul 2005.
-
-Added -DCKHTTP to Mac OS X 10.3-.4 KFLAGS. Makefile, 4 Aug 2005.
-
-Built on BSDI 4.3.1. Added -DCKHTTP.
-
-Compact substring notation extended to accept not only start:length but also
-start-end notation. Thus \s(foo[12:18]) means the substring of foo starting
-at position 12 of length 18, and tne new \s(foo[12-18]) means the substring
-of foo starting at position 12 and ending with position 18. Ditto for
-\:(\%a), etc. ckuus4.c, 9 Aug 2005.
-
-See correspondence with Mark Sapiro, Nov 2003 and Sep 2004, about certain
-variations on IF syntax having been broken by the introduction of "immediate
-macros" circa 1999. It seems the problem -- variables not being expanded --
-always occurs in the ELSE part when (a) the IF condition is false; (b) the
-ELSE command is "standalone", i.e. expressed as a separate command after the
-IF command (original C-Kermit 5A syntax), and (c) its command list is a block.
-This would suggest the problem is in the XXELS parser.
-
-Going back to 1999, I find this:
- Fixed a problem Jim Whitby noticed with quoting in ELSE statements. This
- problem was introduced when I unified IF and XIF, and occurs only when
- ELSE begins on a line, followed by a { command list } rather than a single
- command. The solution (gross) was to make a special version of pushcmd()
- (called pushqcmd()) for this situation, which doubles backslashes while
- copying, BUT ONLY IF it's a command list (i.e. starts with "{"); otherwise
- we break lots of other stuff. Result passes Jim's test and still passes
- ckedemo.ksc and iftest.ksc. ckucmd.c, ckuus6.c, 27 Sep 99.
-
-I undid this change and it made no difference to all the other IF
-constructions (in fact, it fixed an urelated one that was broken, so now
-iftest scores 54 out of 54, instead of 53). However, it does not fix the
-ELSE problem; in fact it pushes it all the way in the other direction:
-
- The opposite occurs any time you try to execute an immediate macro inside a
- macro or any other { block }: not only is the variable evaluated, it is
- evaluated into nothing. It looks like this happens only in immediate
- macros, i.e. *commands* that start with '{'. So maybe we really have two
- isolated problems, that can each be fixed.
-
-The situation is illustrated by this simple script:
-
- def xx {
- if false { echo \%1, echo \%2 }
- else { echo \%3, echo \%4 }
- }
- xx one two three four
-
-With pushqcmd() it echoes the variable names literally; with pushcmd() it
-echoes empty lines. Since ELSE, when its argument is a block, dispatches
-to the immediate-macro handler, it seems we have unified the two problems,
-so fixing one should fix the other.
-
-The problem is that we define a new temporary macro and then call dodo() to
-execute it. But if the definition contains macro arguments, we have added a
-new level of macro invocation, thus wiping out the current level of args.
-The cure is to expand the variables in the immediate macro in the current
-context, before executing it. This means simply changing the cmtxt() call
-that reads the immediate macro to specify xxsting as its processing
-function, rather than NULL, which is used for real macros to defer their
-argument evaluation until after the macro entered. ckuusr.c, 11 Aug 2005.
-
-Added a new makefile target, macosx10.4, for Mac OS X 10.4. This one uses
-an undocumented trick to get the otherwise unavailable-except-by-clicking
-Mac OS X version number (in this case 10.4.2) and stuff it into the HERALD
-string. makefile, 11 Aug 2005.
-
-Built OK on Solaris 9, Solaris 10 (with a few implicit declaration warnings
-in ckuusx.c), Mac OS X 10.4.2 (with some warnings in ckcnet.c and ckcftp.c),
-Mac OS X 10.3.9 (also using the macos10.4 entry, which gets the right
-version number, and gets no warnings at all), RH Enterprise Linux AS4 on AMD
-x86_64, Tru64 Unix 4.0F, SCO UnixWare 7.1.4
-
-For docs and/or scriptlib: Unix C-Kermit can be a stdin/out filter. The
-trick is to use the ASK, ASKQ, or GETC command for input, specifying no
-prompt, and ECHO or XECHO for output, e.g.:
-
-while true {
- ask line
- if fail exit 0
- echo \freverse(\m(line))
-}
-exit 0
-
-FOPEN didn't do anything with the channel number if the open failed, so any
-subsequent command that tried to reference it would get a parse error it was
-undefined or non-numeric, not very helpful. Changed FOPEN to set the
-channel number to -1 if the file can't be opened. Now subsequent operations
-on the channel fail with "Channel -1: File not open". I also added two
-magic channel numbers: -8 means that any FILE command (besides OPEN and
-STATUS) on that channel is a noop that succeeds silently; -9 is a noop that
-fails silently. So now it's possible to simply set a channel number to one
-of these values to disable i/o to certain file without getting lots of error
-messages. dofile(): ckuus7.c, 12 Aug 2005.
-
-Added automatic herald construction for UnixWare 7. makefile, 12 Aug 2005.
-
-Unix isdir() never allowed for arguments that started with tilde, so gave
-incorrect results for ~/tmp/ or ~fdc. The problem was mainly invisible
-since most commands that parsed file or directory names used cmifi(), cmdir(),
-etc, which did the conversions themselves. But IF DIRECTORY was an exception,
-since its operand had to be treated as just text, and then tested after it
-was parsed. ckufio.c, 13 Aug 2005.
-
-Fixed the following:
-"ckuusx.c", line 8959: warning: implicit function declaration: ckgetpeer
-"ckufio.c", line 1869: warning: implicit function declaration: ttwait
-"ckufio.c", line 2941: warning: implicit function declaration: mlook
-"ckufio.c", line 2943: warning: implicit function declaration: dodo
-"ckufio.c", line 2944: warning: implicit function declaration: parser
-"ckcftp.c", line 2625: warning: implicit function declaration: delta2sec
-"ckcftp.c", line 4071: warning: no explicit type given for parameter: prm
-"ckcftp.c", line 8389: warning: no explicit type given for parameter: brief
-ckuusx.c, ckufio.c, ckcftp.c, ckucmd.h. 13 Aug 2005.
-
-Unbuffered stdout code has never worked because the setbuf(stdout,NULL) call
-has to occur before the stdout has been used. The reason it's needed is
-that some Kermit code writes to stderr (which is unbuffered) and other code
-writes to stdout, and therefore typescripts can come out jumbled. Robert
-Simmons <robertls@nortel.com> provided the needed clue when he insisted it
-worked only when executed at the very beginning of main(). So I moved the
-code to that spot. But since now we also want to make unbuffered a runtime
-(command-line) option, I had to do a clunky by-hand pre-prescan inline in
-main() to look thru argv[], even before prescan() was called. ckcmai.c,
-ckutio.c, ckuusy.c, 13 Aug 2005. (Now that this works, it might be a good
-idea to remove all use of stderr from Kermit.)
-
-Managed, after some finagling, to build a 64-bit version on Solaris 10 at
-Utah Math with Sun cc. (Can't make any gcc builds at all, 32- or 64-bit,
-they all blow up in <sys/siginfo.h>.) New target: solaris10_64. makefile,
-15 Aug 2005.
-
-The 64-bit Solaris 10 version compiles and links OK and transfers files in
-remote mode. It can make FTP connections and use them, but Telnet connections
-always fail with "network unreachable". This is with all default libs and
-include files. Nelson has a separate set in /usr/local, which he references
-explicitly in all his 64-bit builds, but using these makes no difference.
-Some data type is wrong in ckcnet.c. But telnet works fine in 64-bit Linux
-and Tru64 builds. Debug logs trace the difference to netopen() (of course),
-the spot where we test the results of inet_addr(), which is already marked
-suspicious for 64-bit builds. It seems that inet_addr() is of type in_addr_t,
-which in turn is u_int32, i.e. an unsigned 32-bit int. Yet the man page says
-that failure is indicated by returning -1. I guess this doesn't matter in
-32-bit builds, but in the 64-bit world, the test for failure didn't work
-right. I made a Solaris-specific workaround, and checked that it works in
-both 32-bit and 64-builds. I really hate typedefs. ckcnet.c, 15 Aug 2005.
-
-Changed the plain-text version (as opposed to the popup or GUI version - the
-GUI version, at least, already does this) of ASKQ to echo keystrokes
-asterisks rather than simply not echo anything, so it's easier to see what
-you're doing, the effects of editing, etc. Experimental; for now, there's
-no way to disable this. Not sure if there needs to be. Anyway, to get this
-working required a fair amount of cleaning up of gtword(), which was echoing
-different ways in different places. ckuus6.c, ckucmd.c, 15 Aug 2005.
-
-Added a solaris9_64 target for building a 64-bit version on Solaris 9 with
-Sun cc. Verified, using the DIR command and \fsize() function on a 4.4GB
-file, that the Solaris 64-bit version of Kermit gets the size correctly, and
-that it can copy such a file (thus its fopen/fread/fwrite/fclose interface
-works right). Initiated a large-file transfer between here and Utah over
-SSH and verified that it puts the correct file size in the A packet when
-sending; the right quantites are shown on the file transfer display (file
-size CPS, percent done, etc). But even at 5Mb/sec, it takes a good while to
-transfer 4.4GB, more than 2 hours (not streaming; 30 window slots, 4K
-packets, maybe it would go faster with streaming)... After an hour or so,
-it filled up the partition and gave up (gracefully) before it reached the
-2GB frontier (drained its pending packets, closed the partial file).
-Restarted at 12:54, this time with streaming and 8K packets (the speed
-wasn't significantly different). This time it transferred 95% of the file
-(4187660288 bytes) before failing because the disk filled up. Went to Utah
-and started a transfer between two Solaris 10/Sparc hosts; this goes about 8
-times faster. The transfer completed successfully after 17m41s. All fields
-in the f.t. display looked right the whole time. Then I verified various
-other 64-bit combinations transferring the same 4.4GB file:
-
- To................
- From Sol Amd i64 Tru
- Sol OK OK OK OK Sol = Solaris 10 / Sparc
- Amd OK Amd = AMD x86_64 RH Enterprise Linux AS4
- i64 OK i64 = Intel IA64, RH 2.1AS
- Tru Tru = Tru64 Unix 4.0F Alpha
-
-(The other combinations are difficult to test for logistical reasons.)
-
-Tried sending the same long file with Kermit's FTP client. It chugged along
-for a while until I stopped it; it would have taken hours to complete.
-There is no indication that it wouldn't have worked, assuming the FTP server
-could also handle long files, which who knows. Anyway, Kermit showed all
-the right data on the display screen. 17 Aug 2005.
-
-On AMD x86_64 and IA64 native 64-bit Linux builds, the pty routines did not
-work at all. ptsname() dumped core. If I commented out ptsname(), then the
-next thing dumped core. The same code works on the other 64-bit builds.
-Poking around, I see that this version of Linux has an openpty() function,
-which I could try using instead of the current API -- grantpty(), etc. Then
-I see that openpty() is already coded into Kermit's pty module,
-conditionalized under HAVE_OPENPTY, which has never before been defined for
-any build. I added a test to the makefile linux target (look for the
-openpty() prototype in <pty.h>, if found define HAVE_OPENPTY as a CFLAG and
-also add -lutil to LNKFLAGS). Works fine on the problem builds, and also
-on previously working 32-bit builds. makefile, 17 Aug 2005.
-
-Fixed a bug in the ASKQ echo asterisks code, which made the VMS version of
-C-Kermit always echo asterisks. Turns out that some code in the main parse
-loop to reset command-specific flags was in the wrong place, which had other
-effects too, for example ASKQ temporarily turns off debug logging as a
-security measure, but the code to turn it back on was skipped in most cases.
-Some other side effects related to the DIRECTORY and CD commands might have
-been possible but I haven't seen them. ckuus[56].c, 23 Aug 2005.
-
-Problem reported when sending a file to VMS when the name in the F packet
-starts with a device specification and does not include a directory field,
-and PATHNAMES are RELATIVE. Example: dsk:foo.bar becomes f_oo.bar. The
-code assumes that if there is a device field, it is followed by a directory
-field, and it inserts a dot after the '[', which in this case is not there.
-Later the dot becomes '_' because of the only-one-dot rule. Solution: only
-insert the dot if there really is an opening bracket. nzrtol(): ckvfio.c,
-23 Aug 2005.
-
-A report on the newsgroup complains that C-Kermit and K95 servers were
-sending REMOTE DIR listings with only #J line terminators, rather than #M#J.
-Yet all the other REMOTE xxx responses arrived with #M#J. snddir() was
-neglecting to switch to text mode. ckcfns.c, 26 Aug 2005.
-
-Back to long files. What happens if 32-bit Kermit is sent a long file?
-It gets an A-packet that looks like this:
-
- ^A_"A."U1""B8#120050815 18:28:03!'42920641*4395073536,#775-!7@ )CP
-
-The 32-bit receiver reacts like so:
-
- gattr length[4395073536]=100106240
-
-the first number being the string from the A-packet, the second being the
-value of the long int it was converted to by atol(). Clearly not equal in
-this case. When this happens Kermit should reject the file instead of
-accepting it and then getting a horrible error a long time later. Added
-code to gattr() to convert the result of atol() back to a string and compare
-it with the original string; if they're not equal, reject the file on the
-assumption that the only reason this could happen is overflow. Also some
-other code in case the sender sends the only LENGTHK attribute. Now files
-whose lengths are too big for a long int are rejected right away, provided
-the sender sends the length in an A packet ahead of the file itself. If
-this new code should ever cause a problem, it can be bypassed with SET
-ATTRIBUTE LENGTH OFF. ckcfn3.c, 26 Aug 2005.
-
-As I recall from when I was testing this a few weeks ago, when the too-big
-length is not caught at A-packet time, the transfer fails more or less
-gracefully when the first attempt is made to write past the limit. I went
-to doublecheck this by sending a big file from the 64-bit Solaris10 version
-to a 32-bit Mac OS X version that does not have today's code. The Mac
-thinks the incoming file is 2GB long when it's really 4GB+. But in this
-case, something new happens! Although the percent done and transfer rate go
-negative, the file keeps coming. It would seem that Mac OS X lets us create
-long files without using any special APIs. The transfer runs to completion.
-Mac OS X Kermit says SUCCESS (but gets the byte count and cps wrong, of
-course). But then a STATUS command says FAILURE. The file was, however,
-transferred successfully; it is exactly the same length and compares byte
-for byte with the original. This tells me that in the Mac OS X version --
-and how many others like it??? -- today's rejection code should not be
-enabled. Meanwhile I put today's new code in #ifndef NOCHECKOVERFLOW..#endif,
-and defined this symbol in the Mac OS X 10.4 target. Over time, I'll have
-to find out what other platforms have this characteristic. And of course
-I'll also have to do something about file-transfer display, statistics, and
-status. makefile, ckcfn3.c, 26 Aug 2005.
-
-From now on I'm going to bump the Dev.xx number each time I upload a new
-ckdaily. This one will be Dev.02. ckckmai.c, 26 Aug 2005.
-
-Got rid of all the extraneous FreeBSD 4 and 5 build targets. Now there's
-one (freebsd) for all FreeBSD 4.1 and later. makefile, 27 Aug 2005.
-
-Mac OS X 10.4 (Tiger) is a 64-bit OS. Building C-Kermit 0n 10.4.2 without
-any special switches stilll gives a 32-bit executable. Ditto building with
--mpowerpc64. Further investigation turned up a tip sheet on MySQL that says
-you have to include all of these: -mpowerpc64 -mcpu=G5 -mtune=G5 -arch
-ppc64. That did the trick. New makefile target: macosx10.4_64. But the
-10.4.2 system I tried did not have 64-bit [n]curses or resolv libs, so this
-build has no -DNOCURSES -DNO_DNS_SRV. makefile, 27 Aug 2005.
-
-Created a symbol CK_64BIT to indicate true 64-bit builds at compile time.
-Added 64-bit announcement to the startup herald and the VERSION text.
-ckcdeb.h, ckuus[r5].c, 27 Aug 2005.
-
-Added a built-in variable \v(bits) to indicate the size of the build
-(16, 32, 64, or whatever else sizeof() might report). ckuusr.h, ckuus4.c,
-27 Aug 2005.
-
-Got rid of all the warnings in 64-bit Mac OS X about args to getsockopt(),
-getsockname(), and getpeername(), and the comparisons on the return value
-of inet_addr(). ckcnet.[ch], 27 Aug 2005.
-
-Now to check the effects on other builds...
- Linux on AMD64: ok.
- Linux on IA64: ok.
- Linux on i386: ok.
- Mac OS X 10.3.9 32-bit: ok.
- Solaris 10 64-bit: ok.
- Solaris 9 32-bit: ok.
- Tru64 4.0F: ok.
- FreeBSD 4.11: ok.
- FreeBSD 5.4 ia64 (64-bit): ok.
- FreeBSD 5.4 i386 (32-bit): ok.
-
-The Tru64 5.1B build totally blew up because they have their own unique
-sockopt/etc length-argument data type (int!), so I had to roll back on using
-socklen_t for this in all 64-bit builds. Checked to make sure it still
-builds on Tru64 4.0F after this change (it does). ckcnet.h, 27 Aug 2005.
-
-The HP-UX 11i/ia64 build comes out to be 32-bit but thinks it's 64-bit.
-CK_64BIT is set because __ia64 is defined. So how do I actually make a
-64-bit HP-UX build? I tried adding +DD64 to CFLAGS, and this generates
-64-bit object files but linking fails to find the needed 64-bit libs
-(e.g. -lm). For now I added an exception for HPUX to the CK_64BIT
-definition section. ckcdeb.h, 27 Aug 2005.
-
-Took the time to verify my recollection about the "graceful failure" on a
-regular Pentium Linux system when receiving a too-big file... OK, it's not
-exactly graceful. It gets a "File size limit exceeded" error; the message
-is printed in the middle of the file-transfer display, apparently not by
-Kermit, and Kermit exits immediately. Looks like a trap... Yup. "File
-size limit exceeded" is SIGXFSZ (25). What happens if we set it to SIG_IGN?
-Just the right thing: The receiver gets "Error writing data" at 2147483647
-bytes, sends E-packet to sender with this message, and recovers with total
-grace (drains packet buffers, returns to prompt). ckutio.c, 27 Aug 2005.
-
-Backed off from rejecting a file because its announced size overflows a
-long. Now instead, I set the file size to -2 (a negative size means the
-size is unknown, but we have always used -1 for this; -2 means "unknown and
-probably too big"). In this case, the f-t display says:
-
- File Size: POSSIBLY EXCEEDS LOCAL FILE SIZE LIMIT
-
-then the user can interrupt it with X or whatever, or can let it run and
-see if maybe (as in the case of Mac OS X) it will be accepted anyway. This
-way, we skip all the bogus calculations of percent done, time remaining, etc.
-ckcfn3.c, ckuusx.c, 27 Aug 2005.
-
-Discovered that VMS C-Kermit on Alpha and IA64 is a 32-bit application;
-sizeof(long) == sizeof(char *) == 4. Tried adding /POINTER_SIZE=64 to VMS
-DECC builds on Alpha and IA64, but the results aren't great. Tons of
-warnings about pointer size mismatches between Kermit pointers and RMS ones,
-and the executable doesn't run. It appears that access to long files
-would require a lot of hacking, similar to what's needed for 32-bit Linux.
-
---- Dev.02: 27 Aug 2005 ---
-
-From Jeff, 28 Aug 2005.
- . Fix SSH GLOBAL-KNOWN-HOSTS-FILE / USER-KNOWN-HOSTS-FILE parsing, ckuus3.c.
- . Pick up K95STARTFLAGS from environment, ckuus4.c.
- . Fix some typos in command-line processing (-q), ckuus4.c.
- . Be sure to suppress herald if started with -q, ckuus7.c.
- . Fix ssh command-line switches, ckuusy.c.
-
-Eric Smutz complained that HTTP POST was adding an extraneous blank line,
-which prevented his application from successfully posting. RFC 2616 states
-(in Section 4.1):
-
- In the interest of robustness, servers SHOULD ignore any empty
- line(s) received where a Request-Line is expected. In other words, if
- the server is reading the protocol stream at the beginning of a
- message and receives a CRLF first, it should ignore the CRLF.
-
- Certain buggy HTTP/1.0 client implementations generate extra CRLF's
- after a POST request. To restate what is explicitly forbidden by the
- BNF, an HTTP/1.1 client MUST NOT preface or follow a request with an
- extra CRLF.
-
-This seems pretty clear. One section of code in http_post() (just above the
-postopen: label) was appending a CRLF to a buffer whose last already was
-terminated by CRLF, and then appended a second CRLF; thus two empty lines.
-I removed the second one. ckcnet.c, 28 Aug 2005.
-
-I looked into the 64-bitness of NetBSD, it seems to be like Linux and
-FreeBSD on 64-bit hardware, i.e. you just build it there and it works, at
-least on Alpha and AMD64, going back to NetBSD 1.4 or 1.5. But I don't have
-access to any of these for verification and documentation on the Web is
-scanty.
-
-Checked PeterE's complaint again of warnings in ckutio.c about parameter
-list of get[ug]id() and gete[ug]id(). When I "make hpux1100o" on HP-UX
-11.11 (PA-RISC), there are definitely no warnings. He says the same thing
-happens on 10.xx, but I don't have access to that any more. I also did
-"make hpux1100o" on HP-UX 11.23 (11i v2) (PA-RISC), also no warnings.
-(Except in both cases, a warning about a comment within a comment in
-/usr/include/sys/ptyio.h). On HP-UX 11i v2 on Itanium, however, there are
-TONS of warnings, mostly of the "variable set but never used" kind. Also
-"dollar sign used in identifier". Tracking this last one down, I see it's
-complaining about code that's in #ifdefs for other platforms, such as
-Apollo Aegis. Is "aegis" defined in HP-UX 11i v2/IA64? No! (It would show
-up in SHOW FEATURES if it was.) Some phase of the compiler is complaining
-about code that it should be skipping (and that, in fact, it *is* skipping
-it because the build is successful). It's as if cc is running lint for me
-but not telling lint which macros are defined and which are not.
-
-Verified that 64-bit linking fails in the same way for HP-UX 11i v2 on both
-IA64 and PA-RISC. Sent a query to HP.
-
-Compiling ckcnet.c and ckcftp.c got the familiar sockopt-related warnings on
-HP-UX 11i v2; turns out it is just like Tru64 Unix in using an int for the
-length argument. Added another special case and the warnings went away.
-ckcnet.h, 28 Aug 2005.
-
-Added some stuff to SHOW FEATURES to see what kinds of macros are exposed
-(e.g. INT_MAX, LONG_MAX, LLONG_MAX, etc) and also show sizeof(long long) and
-sizeof(off_t). Building this code all over the place will give me an idea
-of how widespread these data types are, and to what extent I can tell
-whether they are available from clues in the header files. (At first
-glance, it appears that I'm not picking up <limits.h>, but adding an
-#include for it is just asking for trouble.) No complaints about long long
-or off_t from Solaris 9 or recent Linuxes. ckuus5.c, 28 Aug 2005.
-
-Fixed a warning in HP-UX 10 and 11 stemming from some old-style prototypes
-in ckutio.c for get[re][gu]id(). ckutio.c, 29 Aug 2005.
-
-Updated minix3 target from Andy Tanenbaum. makefile, 29 Aug 2005.
-
-PeterE confirms that "long long" and off_t are available in all HP-UX 10 and
-11, and in HP-UX 9 on PA-RISC but not Motorola. 30 Aug 2005.
-
-Got 64-bit builds to work on HP-UX. According to my notes, John Bigg of HP
-said (in 1999) that HP-UX 10.30 and later require PA-RISC 1.1, and do not
-work on PA-RISC 1.0. But is PA 1.0 64-bit or what? Today, Alex McKale of
-HP said "The 64-bit binaries will work on all machines that have the same or
-later release of HP-UX (excluding PA-RISC 1.1 machines)". Still need
-clarification... Maybe it's that all IA64 builds can be 64-bit but I need
-dual builds for PA-RISC. Meanwhile I started transfer of a 4GB+ file from
-Solaris to HP-UX 11i but it exceeded some quota on the HP long before it
-approached the 2G point. It failed cleanly and up until then it was working
-fine (numbers, stats, etc). 30 Aug 2005.
-
-Support of large files in 32-bit builds began in 10.20. 64-bit application
-support began in 11.00, but not all machines that run 11.00 support 64 bits.
-About long files, see HP /usr/share/doc/lg_files.txt.
-
-PeterE found that certain patterns can still make Kermit loop; example:
-
- if match T01011-00856-21-632-073 *[abc] { echo GOOD } else { echo BAD }
- if match T01011-00856-21-632-073 *[a-z] { echo GOOD } else { echo BAD }
-
-The minimum offending pattern is * followed immediately by an [xxx]
-construction, followed by anything else, including nothing. Previous
-versions of Kermit handled this one correctly, without looping (but failed
-certain matches that should have succeeded). The new section of code I
-added on 15 June, upon failure to match, advances the string pointer and
-backs up the pattern to the previous pattern, and starts again
-(recursively). However, there needed to be a corresponding check at entry
-for an empty target string. ckmatch(): ckclib.c, 12 Sep 2005.
-
-PeterE discovered that "kermit -y filethatdoesnotexit" gives an erroneous
-error message that names the user's customization, rather than the name
-given on the command line. doinit(): ckuus5.c, 12 Sep 2005.
-
-FREAD does not get an error if it tries to read a record or file or piece of
-file that is too big for its buffer. In particular, FREAD /SIZE:xxx seems
-to succeed even if less than xxx was read. It should fail unless, perhaps,
-it successfully read up to the end of the file. Furthermore, if xxx is
-bigger than the file buffer size, it should complain. The buffer is
-line[LINBUFSIZ], 32K. The lack of failure was due to code in dofile() that
-adjusted the given size silently if it was greater than the buffer size,
-which I removed, and also added a check when parsing the /SIZE: switch.
-dofile(): ckuus7.c, 12 Sep 2005.
-
-That still didn't help with FREAD /SIZE:n returning less than n bytes, even
-when they were available. That's because the underlying routine, z_in(),
-didn't check fread()'s return code, which is the number of bytes read.
-If fread() has smaller buffers, it needs to be called in a loop. z_in():
-ckuus7.c, 12 Sep 2005.
-
-Flen() fails on strings of length 8192 or more. The limitation is in the
-callers of zzstring, which seem to be specifying an 8K buffer, in this case
-fneval(). The operable symbols are FNVALL (max length of value returned by
-a function) and MAXARGLEN (maximum length of an argument to a function). I
-changed both of these for BIGBUFOK builds to be CMDBL. Buffers can never be
-infinite, there has to be a limit. It's important to make everything work
-consistently within that limit, and to make something useful happen when the
-limit is exceeded. At this point, I can probably also increase the limits
-for modern 32-bit systems, and certainly for 64-bit ones. Also there's no
-point in worrying about 16-bit platforms any more; earlier C-Kermit versions
-can still be used on them if necessary. ckuusr.h, 12 Sep 2005.
-
-Special #ifdefs for finding resolv.h and nameser.h in MINIX3 from Andy
-Tanenbaum. ckcnet.c, 20 Sep 2005.
-
-PeterE noticed that ckmatch(), even though it works pretty well now, does a
-lot of extra and unnecessary recursion after determining the string and
-pattern do not match, at least when the pattern is of the form *[abc].
-After several false starts I was able reduce this effect to a minor level
-(but not eliminate it all together) by changing a while loop into a do loop.
-ckmatch(): ckclib.c, 15 Oct 2005.
-
-Added -DNOLONGLONG to HP-UX 8.00 and earlier builds, and to Motorola-based
-HP-UX 9.00 builds. This is simply to inhibit the test for whether "long
-long" is supported by the compiler, since when it isn't, the module
-containing the test won't compile. makefile, ckuus5.c, 16 Oct 2005.
-
-Making ASKQ always echo askterisks is a bad idea, because when it doesn't
-echo, it's the perfect way to read silently from stdin, e.g. in a CGI script
-(INPUT can also be used for this but it's not as straightforward). So I put
-the default for ASKQ back to no echoing, then gave ASKQ its own switch
-table, which is the same as for ASK with the addition of an /ECHO:x switch,
-which tells what character to echo. ckucmd.c, ckuus[26].c, 17 Oct 2005.
-
-Fixed a bug in FTP GET /COMMAND filename commandname; it always dumped core
-dereferencing a null string (the nonexistent local asname). ckcftp.c,
-17 Oct 2005.
-
-For docs: if you don't like the funny business that happens when you type
-an IF command at the prompt, use XIF instead and it won't happen. Also note
-that commands like "if xxx { echo blah } else { echo blah blah }" don't
-work when typed at the prompt; you have to use XIF for this.
-
-Back to ckmatch()... Under certain conditions (e.g. patterns like *[abc])
-failure to match would not stop the recursion because the string and pattern
-arguments are on the stack, as they must be, so there was no way for level
-n-1 to know that level n had detected a definitive nonmatch and that no
-further attempts at matching were required. The right way to handle this is
-to recode the whole thing as coroutines, the cheap way out is with a global
-static flag. Works perfectly, in the sense that the match.ksc test results
-are identical to what they were before and the extra backing up and
-recursion are eliminated. (The Oct 15th fix wasn't really a fix, it broke
-a couple of cases.) ckclib.c, 20 Oct 2005.
-
-ckuus7.c(2987): warning #267: the format string requires additional arguments
-(in PURGE command); fixed 20 Oct 2005.
-
-From Andy Tanenbaum, final changes for MINIX3: #ifdef out the inline
-definitions for gettimeofday() and readlink(). ckutio.c, 23 Oct 2005.
-
-From Jeff: struct gss_trials initializers changed from gss_mech_krb5 to
-ck_gss_mech_krb5. ckcftp.c, 23 Oct 2005.
-
-From Jeff: some improvements to K95 GUI SHOW TERMINAL. ckuus5.c, 23 Oct 2005.
-
-Found and corrected some misplaced #ifdefs in shofeat(), ckuus5.c, 23 Oct 2005.
-
---- Dev.03 ---
-
-Fixed a compiler warning in a debug() statement in zzstring() by adding
-parens. ckuus4.c, 24 Oct 2005.
-
-Added -DNOLONGLONG to sv68r3v6 target, makefile, 25 Oct 2005.
-
-New makefile targets for HP-UX from PeterE to handle the 'long long'
-situation. 26 Oct 2005.
-
-From Jeff: changes to support OpenSSL 0.9.8, ck_ssl.h. ckcasc.h has had
-short names defined for ASCII control characters for 20-some years but now
-they are causing conflicts, so EM becomes XEM (also for OpenSSL 0.9.8).
-Changed K95's default terminal type from VT320 to VT220 because VT320
-termcaps/terminfos are disappearing from Unix hosts: ckuus7.c. Reorganize
-the data-types section of SHOW FEATURES to add more macro tests for integral
-sizes and to provide for the proper printf formatting in order to allow the
-sizes to be output ("You are going to need to be careful because %llx is not
-supported on all platforms. On Windows, it is the same as %lx, 32 bits"):
-ckuus5.c, 26 Oct 2005.
-
-Defined NOLONGLONG ckcdeb.h for various old platforms where we know we are
-never going to need 64-bit ints (even if they support a long long datatype,
-chances are pretty slim they supported 64-bit file sizes). ckcdeb.h,
-26 Oct 2005.
-
-PeterE noticed that GOTO targets can only be 50 characters long. This was
-by design, a long time ago, on the assumption that nobody would make longer
-labels. But in SWITCH statements, case labels can be variables that expand
-to anything at all. If we chop them off at 50, we might execute the wrong
-case. Changed the maximum label size to be 8K, and added code to dogoto()
-to check when a label or target is too long and fail, to prevent spurious
-GOTO or SWITCH results. ckuusr.h, ckuus[r6].c, 26 Oct 2005.
-
-Testing revealed there was still a problem with SWITCH case labels that were
-variables that expanded into long strings. Turns out that I was being
-too clever when I decided that, if the SWITCH macro was n1 characters long
-and the case-label search target was n2 characters long, I only had to
-search the first n1-n2+1 characters of the macro definition. That was true
-before I allowed case labels to be variables, but not any more! Fixed in
-dogoto(): ckuus5.c, 26 Oct 2005.
-
---- Dev.04 ---
-
-Dev.04 didn't actually contain Jeff's data-type changes to shofeat(),
-I think I saved the wrong buffer in EMACS... Fixed now. 27 Oct 2005.
-
-PeterE corrected a typo in the HP-UX 7.00 makefile target. 27 Oct 2005.
-
-PeterE had been reporting problems stress-testing the new SWITCH code, but
-only on HP-UX 9, primarily stack overrun. Turns out to be the HP-UX 9
-optimizing compiler's fault. No optimization, no problems.
-
-PeterE found that even when dogoto() detects a string that is too long
-and fails, this does not stop SWITCH from producing a result, which can not
-possibly be trusted. Changed the part of dogoto() that handles this to
-not just fail, but also to exit the script immediately and return to top
-level. ckuus6.c, 28 Oct 2005.
-
-An idea popped into my head after having typed too many commands like "dir
-ck[cuw]*.[cwh]" to check the list of matching files, and then having to
-retype the same filespec in a SEND command: Why not unleash some unused
-control character such as Ctrl-K to spit out the most recently entered input
-filespec? It was easy, just a few lines in cmifi2() and gtword(), plus a
-couple declarations. To see all the changes, search for "lastfile" (all the
-new code is protected by #ifndef NOLASTFILE). ckucmd.c, 28 Oct 2005.
-
-I added a new variable \v(lastfilespec) that expands to the same last
-filespec, for use in scripts. ckuusr.h, ckuus4.c, 28 Oct 2005.
-
-The Unix version of C-Kermit failed to put anything in the session log if
-SET TERMINAL DEBUG ON. Rearranged the pertinent clause so logging happens
-independent of TERMINAL DEBUG. For now, since the user who noticed this
-wanted debug format to go into the session log, that's what I do. The
-alternative would be to just log the raw incoming stream as usual, or to add
-Yet Another SET Command to choose. ckucns.c, 11 Nov 2005.
-
-Fixed HELP INTRO text. ckuus2.c, 11 Nov 2005.
-
-Added NOLONGLONG for SV68. ckcdeb.h, 11 Nov 2005.
-
---- Dev.05 ---
-
-Added a debug() statement in FTP secure_getbyte() to see what's going on
-with Muhamad Taufiq Tajuddin's 205-byte-per-second FTP/SSL downloads.
-
---- Dev.06 ---
-
-Result: nothing, SSL_get_error() does not report any errors. Suggested
-testing SSL_read()'s return code, if 0 don't update the screen.
-
-Created a new data type CK_OFF_T in ckcdeb.h that will eventually resolve
-to whatever each platform uses for file sizes and offsets. ckcdeb.h,
-17 Nov 2005.
-
-Made a new library routine ckfstoa() that converts a file size or offset to
-a string. This is to solve the problem with having to use different
-printf() formats for different representations of file size (int, long, long
-long, off_t, signed, unsigned, etc). Replaced a few printf("%l",size) with
-printf("%s",ckfstoa(size)) with the expected results. This is just a start,
-the definitions will need adjustment for many platforms, variables need to
-be redeclared, and all the offending printf's (and printw's) will have to
-hunted down and converted. ckclib.[ch], ckuus4.c, 17 Nov 2005.
-
-Built a minimal version on Linux with:
-make linux "KFLAGS=-DNOLOCAL -DNOICP -DNOCSETS -DNODEBUG"
-Worked fine, result was 260K on i686. 21 Nov 2005.
-
-Discovered that Kermit's date parser, contrary to the documentation, failed
-to handle strings like "Wed, 13 Feb 2002 17:43:02 -0800 (PST)", which are
-commonly found in email. This was because of an overzealous and misguided
-check in the code; once removed, all was well. ckucmd.c, 26 Nov 2005.
-
-Added a new format code 4 to \fcvtdate() to emit asctime() format, used in
-BSD-format email message envelopes (i.e. the "From " line). shuffledate(),
-ckucmd.c, ckuus[24].c, 26 Nov 2005.
-
-Added a new function \femailaddress(). Given a From: or Sender: header line
-from an RFC2822-format email address, extracts and returns the actual email
-address, such as kermit@columbia.edu. ckuusr.h, ckuus[42].c, 26 Nov 2005.
-
-Using the new functions, I wrote a script to fetch mail from a POP3 server
-over a TLS connection. But the line-at-a-time input (needed for changing
-line terminators and byte-stuffing text lines that start with "From ") is
-slow, 17 sec to read 29 messages totaling 175K.
-
-Added INPUT /CLEAR so INPUT can be started with a clean buffer without
-requiring a sepearate CLEAR INPUT command. ckuusr.h, ckuus[r24].c,
-27 Nov 2005.
-
-One thing that INPUT was never able to do well was read and save the
-complete incoming data stream. That's because, while waiting for its
-target, the buffer might overflow wrap around. Yet there was never a way to
-tell it to stop when its buffer fills up and let me save it. I added a
-/NOWRAP switch that does this. If the buffer fills up before any other
-completion criterion is met, INPUT returns failure, but with \v(instatus)
-set to 6 (the next available instatus value). Thus a program that wants to
-read and save (say) an email message from a POP server, which could be any
-length at all, and which terminates with <CRLF>.<CRLF> could do this:
-
- set flag off
- while open connection {
- input /nowrap 10 \13\10.\13\10 # Wait for <CRLF>.<CRLF>
- if success {
- frwrite /string \%o {\freplace(\v(input),\13\10.\13\10,\13\10)}
- set flag on
- break
- } else if ( == \v(instatus) 6 || == \v(instatus) 1 ) {
- frwrite /string \%o {\v(input)}
- continue
- }
- break
- }
- if flag (handle success)
-
-Note carefully the braces around the FWRITE text; without them, trailing
-spaces would be lost.
-
-Previously the only way to INPUT an entire data stream without losing
-anything (assuming it was ordinary lines of text that were not "too long"),
-was line-by-line:
-
- while open connection {
- input /clear 10 \13\10
- if fail break
- if eq "\v(input)" "$ \13\10" break
- fwrite /string \%o {\freplace(\v(input),\13\10,\10)}
- }
-
-The new code is 3 times faster using the default INPUT buffer length of 4K.
-Raising it to 16K makes it 3.6 times faster (not worth it). Changing the
-POP3 script to use INPUT /NOWRAP makes it about twice as fast (it does more;
-it has to do all the byte-stuffing and unstuffing). 27 Nov 2005.
-
-Changed ssl_display_xxx() to just return if SET QUIET ON. Otherwise there
-is no way to suppress the messages. Also protected a previously unprotected
-printf("[SSL - OK]\r\n"); by if ( ssl_verbose_flag ). ck_ssl.c,
-28 Nov 2005.
-
-Discovered that FOPEN /APPEND doesn't work if the file doesn't exist. It
-uses cmiofi() which is a super-hokey front end to cmifi2(). I had code to
-call it but for some reason it was commented out, with a note to the effect
-it didn't work. I uncommented it but that didn't help much. So I wrote an
-entirely new cmiofi() that works exactly as it should, using chained FDBs,
-_CMIFI to _CMOFI (I think the original cmiofi() predated chained FDBs).
-ckuus7.c, ckucmd.c, 29 Nov 2005.
-
-Getting rid of the awful hacks required to call cmiofi() meant I also had to
-change the EDIT command, which is the only other place where it's used.
-Unfortunately now it's no longer possible to give EDIT without a filename
-(to just start an empty editor) but I doubt anyone will notice. ckuusr.c,
-29 Nov 2005.
-
-IF KERBANG didn't always work right. If a kerbang script TAKEs another
-kerbang script, the second one should have IF KERBANG false, but it didn't.
-Added a check for \v(cmdlevel) == 1. Now you can write a wrapper that runs
-a kerbang script in a loop, and the latter can use IF KERBANG to know
-whether to EXIT (if called at top level) or END (if called by another
-script, thus allowing -- in this case -- the loop to continue). ckuus6.c,
-29 Nov 2005.
-
-Changed \flop() and flopx() functions to take a third argument, a number
-signifying at which occurrence of the break character to lop, so:
-
- \flopx(sesame.cc.columbia.edu) = edu
- \flopx(sesame.cc.columbia.edu,,2) = columbia.edu
-
-ckuus[24].c, 1 Dec 2005.
-
-Built OK on VMS 7.2-1 with MultiNet 4.4. Built with and without OpenSSL on
-Linux OK, ditto Solaris 9. Built OK on RH Linux AS4 on X86_64 (64-bit);
-"show var fsize" (using new ckfstoa()) works OK there. Also Mac OS X 10.3.9
-(32-bit), Tru64 UNIX 4.0F (64-bit), HP-UX 11iv2 (64-bit) (picky new compiler
-spews out tons of useless warnings), FreeBSD 6.0 on ia64 (64-bit).
-
---- Dev.07 ---
-
-Changed "make netbsd" to be a synonym for "make netbsd2" because the
-original netbsd target was ancient. Renamed it to netbsd-old. makefile,
-3 Dec 2005.
-
-Updated INPUT and MINPUT help text. ckuus2.c, 3 Dec 2005.
-
-Discovered that on a SET PORT /SSL connection, Kermit treats incoming
-0xff data bytes (e.g. sent from the POP server) as IACs and goes into Telnet
-negotiations. Jeff says "You will need to implement NP_SSLRAW and NP_TLSRAW
-that do the same as NP_TCPRAW but negotiate SSL or TLS as appropriate."
-This was not as easy as it sounded, because apparently a lot of the Telnet
-code is used by SSL and TLS even when Telnet protocol is not being executed.
-I wound up doing this as follows: I added /SSL-RAW and /TLS-RAW to the
-switch table. Rather than disable Telnet, they do exactly what the /SSL and
-/TLS switches do, but also set a special flag. This flag is checked in only
-two place: netclos() (to prevent Kermit from sending TELNET LOGOUT when
-closing the connection), and tn_doop() (to prevent Kermit from reacting to
-incoming IACs; it makes tn_doop() return(3), which means "quoted IAC", which
-causes the caller to keep the IAC as data). ckcnet.h, ckctel.h, ckctel.c,
-ckuus7.c, 4 Dec 2005.
-
-The INPUT command did not account for tn_doop() returning 3. Fixed in
-doinput(), ckuus4.c, 4 Dec 2005.
-
-Added another debug() statement in FTP secure_getbyte() to see what's going on
-with Muhamad Taufiq Tajuddin's 205-byte-per-second FTP/SSL downloads, plus
-new code to test SSL_read()'s return code (byte count); if 0 don't update
-the screen. ckcftp.c, 4 Dec 2005.
-
---- Dev.08 ---
-
-Fixed a typo in the non-ANSIC definition of ckfstoa(). ckclib.c, 7 Dec 2005.
-
-Our Ctrl-C trap (the ON_CTRLC macro) wasn't working for kerbang files.
-Rearranged some code to make it work. ckcmai.c, 8 Dec 2005.
-
-Started converting code to use CK_OFF_T for file sizes and offsets, and
-all [s]printf's to replace "%ld" or whatever with "%s", and the size
-variable with a call to ckfstoa(). Since I haven't actually changed the
-definition of CK_OFF_T from what all the size variables were to begin
-with (i.e. long), it shouldn't do any harm. So far just ckcfn3.c
-10 Dec 2005.
-
-An updated HP-UX 9.xx makefile target from PeterE to fix a core dump that
-happens on that platform due to insufficient resources. 14 Dec 2005.
-
-Added debug() statements to http_blah() routines to tell whether the
-connection is "chunked". There seems to be a bad performance problem.
-ckcnet.c, 14 Dec 2005.
-
-PeterE complained about ugly DIRECTORY error message, ?No files match -
-"{blah}". The braces are used internally in case the user typed more than
-one filespec. I changed the error message to remove them. Ditto DELETE.
-ckuus6.c, 15 Dec 2005.
-
-The problem with HTTP downloads is that Kermit always does single-character
-read() or socket_read() calls (or the SSL equivalent); see http_inc(). I
-added buffering code for non-SSL connections only but it's gross because it
-has to swap ttyfd and httpfd before calling nettchk(). I tried making a
-nettchk() clone that accepts a file descriptor as an argument but it didn't
-work because too many other routines that are invoked directly or implicitly
-by nettchk() (such as in_chk()) are still hardwired to use ttyfd. HTTP GETs
-are now 20 times faster on the local network (the improvement is less
-dramatic over a clogged Internet). ckcnet.[ch], 15 Dec 2005.
-
---- Dev.09 ---
-
-HTTP file-descriptor swapping is not thread safe. Doing it right, of
-course, is a big deal, so for now I just don't define HTTP_BUFFERING for
-Windows. ckcnet.c, 15 Dec 2005.
-
-Noticed that HTTP not included in FreeBSD and OpenBSD builds. Fixed in
-ckcdeb.h, 22 Dec 2005.
-
-Fleshed out 32/64-bit data type definitions and changed struct zattr
-(file attribute structure) members length and lengthk to have the new
-CK_OFF_T type. Changed final arguments of debug() and tlog() to be the new
-LONGLONG type. ckcdeb.h, 22 Dec 2005.
-
-Changed ckfstoa() to return a signed number in string form, rather than an
-unsigned one. That's because off_t is signed (thank goodness). Added the
-inverse function, ckatofs() so we can convert file sizes and offsets back
-and forth between binary number and string. ckclib.c, 22 Dec 2005.
-
-Changed Attribute Packet reader to convert incoming file size attribute
-with ckatofs() rather than atol(). ckcfn3.c, 22 Dec 2005.
-
-Converted debug(), tlog(), ckscreen(), etc, to handle potentially "long long"
-arguments by making their "n" argument CK_OFF_T. ckuusx.c, ckcdeb.h,
-22 Dec 2005.
-
-Converted the rest of the source files to use CK_OFF_T for all file size
-and offset and byte-count related variables, and converted all references to
-these variables in printfs to go through ckfstoa(). Then I built it on
-Linux/i386 with:
-
- make linux "KFLAGS=-D_LARGEFILE_SOURCE -D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64"
-
-which makes off_t be 64 bits and magically makes all the regular file APIs
-use 64-bit sizes and offsets without changing the API calls in the source
-code. It's going to be a lot of work to get through all the kinks but I was
-able to send a long file, do directory listings of long files, do
-\fsize(longfile), etc. When it sends a file, the length is shown correctly
-in the A packet. If the receiver does not support big numbers, it receives
-the file OK anyway, without showing the size, the thermometer, or percent
-done (and then will get an error when the file keeps coming after the 2G
-mark). Kermit 95 actually refuses long files for "Size", but only if the
-announced is less than 2^63 bytes. When today's Linux version receives a
-file, it shows the length correctly in the file-transfer display, as well as
-percent done, thermometer, etc. Also built this version on true 64-bit
-Linux, and it worked fine. Many files changed, 22 Dec 2005.
-
-For the record, this API is specified in X/Open's Single UNIX Specification
-Version 2, which is branded as UNIX 98. It is called Large File Support, or
-LFS, and was developed at the Large File Summit.
-
-It looks like the operative feature-test macro in glibc for transitional
-large file support is __USE_LARGEFILE64. So if this is defined, we can also
-supply _LARGEFILE_SOURCE and _FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 automatically for 32-bit
-Linux builds. But there's a Catch-22, you don't know if this is defined
-until you read the header files, but you have to define _LARGEFILE_SOURCE
-and _FILE_OFFSET_BITS before you read the header files. Maybe it's good
-enough to grep through <features.h> for __USE_LARGEFILE64. makefile,
-23 Dec 2005.
-
-Checked this on true 64-bit Linux. The same symbols are defined in CFLAGS,
-but they do no harm; it builds without complaint and works fine. 24 Dec 2005.
-
-Built it on Red Hat Linux 6.1 from 1999. This picked up the long file
-support too. Guess 6.1 isn't old enough to not have it! Kermit seems to
-work OK on regular files but I don't have enough disk space to create a long
-file, and my bigfile.c program (which creates a long file containing only 1
-byte) doesn't work ("fseeko: invalid argument"). It looks like parts of
-this API were visible in Linux before they were actually working.
-24 Dec 2005.
-
-Converted all fseek() and ftell() to macros that expand to fseek() and ftell()
-or fseeko() and ftello() depending on whether _LARGEFILE_SOURCE is defined.
-ckufio.c, ckuus7.c, ckuusx.c, 24 Dec 2005.
-
-Made a CK_OFF_T version of cmnum(). It would be a very big deal to just
-change cmnum() to return a new type, so another idea is to rename cmnum() to
-something else, cmnumw(), change its result argument to CK_OFF_T, and then
-make a stub cmnum() to call it to get an int, then call cmnumw() explicitly
-any time we need a big number. ckucmd.c, 24 Dec 2005.
-
-Calling cmnumw() directly requires changes to each routine that uses it.
-The INCREMENT and DECREMENT commands, for example, required changes to
-doincr(), varval(), and incvar(), and all references to them. ckuusr.[ch],
-ckuus[56].c, 24 Dec 2005.
-
-Calling cmnumw() in chained FDBs required defining a new function code,
-_CMNUW, adding a new member to the OFDB struct for returning wide results,
-and adding a new case to cmfdb(). ckucmd.[ch], 24 Dec 2005.
-
-Changed FSEEK and FCOUNT to use the new chained FDB interface, now we can
-seek and look past 2GB. ckuus7.c, 24 Dec 2005.
-
-Next come switches, which store their results in a struct stringint. This
-struct was defined in each module where it was used (ckuus[r367].c, ckcftp.c).
-I moved the definition to ckuusr.h and added a wval member, which can be
-referenced by any switch-parsing code that calls cmnumw(). 24 Dec 2005.
-
-Changed SEND /CALIBRATE:n to allow big values of n. This makes it possible
-to test the protocol aspects of long-file transfer without actually having a
-long file handy. ckuusr.c, 24 Dec 2005.
-
-SEND /SMALLER-THAN:n, SEND /LARGER-THAN:n, and and SEND /START:n also now
-allow large values of n. ckuusr.c, 24 Dec 2005.
-
-Changed the algebraic expression evaluator to use wide values.
-ckuus5.c, 24 Dec 2005.
-
-Fixed ckfstoa() to handle the case when n is negative and (0 - n) is also
-negative, which happens for numbers 2^(n-1) or greater, where n is the
-number of bits in the word size we're dealing with, e.g. 64, in which case
-2^63 has its sign bit set so seems to be negative. In such cases, ckfstoa()
-returns "OVERFLOW" instead of a numeric string. We'll have to see how this
-plays out but I think it's better to cause a parse error and stop things
-dead than to return a spurious number. ckclib.c, 24 Dec 2005.
-
-Converted the S-Expression handler to use wide integers. ckuus3.c, 24 Dec 2005.
-
-Took all the LONGLONG stuff out of ckcdeb.h, we don't need it.
-
-All of these changes result in 64-bit arithmetic (more or less) on 32-bit
-Linux, as well as on true 64-bit platforms.
-
-Rebuilt today's code on Solaris 9 in the 32-bit and 64-bit worlds, on Red
-Hat 6.1, Red Hat AS4.2. I haven't bothered trying a 32/64 hybrid build for
-Solaris, since I can build a pure 64-bit version there. Quick tests show
-the large-number arithmetic works OK in all cases except, of course, on pure
-32-bit builds (unfortunately I can't find a running Linux system old enough
-to verify this for Linux, but it's true for other 32-bit platforms).
-24 Dec 2005.
-
-Tried building a hybrid version on Solaris 9 after all since the LFS API is
-ostensibly the same as for Linux:
-
- make solaris9 "KFLAGS=-D_LARGEFILE_SOURCE -D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64"
-
-It built smoothly and the resulting binary is 2.5MB compared to 3.4MB for
-the 100% 64-bit version. Looks like a keeper. For now, added solaris9lfs
-and solaris10lfs entries to the makefile but if these work on PCs we can
-make these the regular entries for Solaris 9 and 10. 27 Dec 2005.
-
-Built on Mac OS X 10.4 with the regular target. It seems that in that case,
-off_t is 64 bits anyway. Noticed that a lot of stuff didn't work, like
-exponentiation in S-Expressions. Tried building it as above, which worked,
-and now CK_OFF_T is 64 bits instead of 32, but (^ 2 30) is still 2.0. In
-fact 2-to-the-any-power is 2.0. It seems that the Mac OS X version did not
-have FNFLOAT defined. It also seems that every test in dosexp() like:
-
- if (result != fpresult) fpflag++;
-
-should have been protected by #ifdef FNFLOAT..#endif /* FNFLOAT */ -- a
-double-ended break, as they say in the nuclear power industry. ckuus3.c,
-27 Dec 2005.
-
-Added GREP /EXCEPT:pattern. ckuus[26].c, 27 Dec 2005.
-
-Fixed a problem with uninitialized pv[].wval (switch-parsing parameter-value)
-members that showed up on certain platforms or with certain compilers. Now
-the Mac OS X 10.4 version works. ckuus[r367].c, ckcftp.c, 28 Dec 2005.
-
-Built on Unixware 7.1.1, a pure 32-bit build, seems fine. Rebuilt on Red
-Hat AS 4.2 just to make sure I didn't break anything, it's OK. No testing
-on HP-UX, etc, because HP testdrive file sytem is full, can't upload anything.
-29 Dec 2005.
-
-Commented out the SHOW FEATURES section that displays constants like
-INT_MAX, CHAR_MAX, etc, because printing each value in the appropriate
-format is too tricky, and we don't need them anyway. ckuus5.c, 29 Dec 2005.
-
-Updated ckvfio.c to use CK_OFF_T for the relevant variables. Built and
-tested on VMS/Alpha 7.2: file transfer in remote mode; making a Telnet
-connection and then local-mode file transfer; S-Expressions, all OK. Also
-built a no-net version OK. 29 Dec 2005.
-
-Built and tested on Red Hat AS4 AMD X86_64, used it to upload new sources to
-FreeBSD 4.11. Built on FreeBSD 4.11/i386. Here's another one where off_t
-is 64 bits, even though long is 32 bits. But it seems to work ok, not sure
-why, when CK_OFF_T is 32 bits. There is no _LARGEFILE_SOURCE stuff in the
-header files. 29 Dec 2005.
-
-Built on Mac OS X 10.3.9 using the new macosx10.4 target to pick up LFS.
-Works fine.
-
-Built on Red Hat Linux 4WS on IA64 (64-bit). Now this one is odd, stat()
-fails on big files. It happens also if I use the "linuxnolfs" target, which
-does not define _USE_LARGEFILE or _FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64. DIRECTORY BIGFILE
-shows the size as -1, but if "log debug", it says "no files match", i.e.
-different behavior, observer effect. I hate when that happens.
-
-Let's see if that's an anomoly... Built on Tru64 Unix 4.0F (64-bit Alpha).
-It sees long files just fine. Rebuilt and checked on x86_64 again... fine.
-OK, let's not worry about IA64 yet.
-
-Another small fix to the HP-UX 9.0 target from PeterE. makefile, 29 Dec 2005.
-
----Dev.10---
-
-Code adjustments from Jeff, mainly to the SSL and TLS Raw mode code from
-several weeks ago, plus changing some data types in the security code to
-CK_OFF_T, plus a different data type for CK_OFF_T for K95 because Windows
-size_T isn't signed. This presumably will allow large-number arithmetic but
-it will not give large file access because that will require replacing all C
-library file i/o calls (esp. in ckofio.c) with native Windows APIs. Build
-on Solaris 9 with and without SSL and on Linux RH AS4.2 with and without
-SSL. ck_crp.c, ck_ssl.c, ck_ssl.h, ckcdeb.h, ckcftp.c, ckcmai.c, ckcnet.c,
-ckcnet.h, ckctel.c, ckuat2.h, ckuus4.c, ckuus7.c, ckuusr.c, 30 Dec 2005.
-
-It was reported that WRITE SESSION always returned a failure status, even
-when it succeeded. The problem was that Unix versions of zsout() and
-zsoutl(), for the session log only, were using write() and returning
-write()'s return code, which is different from what zsout() and zsoutl() are
-documented to return. Also plugged a couple potential holes in zsoutx()
-that I noticed while I was in the neighborhood. ckufio.c, 30 Dec 2005.
-
-Added FSEEK /FIND:pattern. This form of FSEEK accepts all the other
-switches and arguments and performs the desired seek. Then, if the seek was
-successful, it starts from that point and reads through the file, line by
-line, searching for the first line that contains the given string or matches
-the given (unanchored) pattern and, if found, sets the file pointer to the
-beginning of that line. Useful, e.g., for very long timestamped logs, where
-you want to start processing at a certain date or time; searching for a
-particular string is much faster than doing date comparisons on each line.
-ckuus[27].c, 30 Dec 2005.
-
-It was annoying me that FILE STATUS (FSTATUS) required a channel number to
-be given even if only one file was open, so I supplied the correct default
-in that case. ckuus7.c, 30 Dec 2005.
-
-INPUT /NOWRAP, added recently, is used for efficiently copying the INPUT
-stream intact, but it's not good for matching because if the INPUT target is
-broken between the end of the previous buffer and the beginning of the next
-one, the context is lost and the match does not occur. I thought of several
-ways around this, but they all involve saving a huge amount of context --
-old input buffers, the arrays of target strings and corresponding match
-positions, etc. The alternative is fairly simple but it's not transparent
-to the user. Here's what I did in a POP script:
-
- .eom := "\13\10.\13\10"
- set flag off # FLAG ON = success
- while ( open connection && not flag ) {
- .oldinput := \fright(\v(input),8) # Save tail of previous INPUT buffer
- input /clear /nowrap 4 \m(eom) # Get new INPUT buffer
- if success { # INPUT matched - good
- .s := {\freplace(\v(input),\m(eom),\13\10)}
- set flag on
- } else { # No match
- .s := \v(input) # Check if target crossed the border
- .oldinput := \m(oldinput)\fsubstr(\v(input),1,8)
- if \findex(\m(eom),\m(oldinput)) set flag on
- }
- ...
- }
-
-I think this will be easier to explain than any dangerous and grotesque
-magic I might put into doinput() itself. For now, added a few words about
-this to HELP INPUT. ckuus2.c, 30 Dec 2005.
-
-Back to the pattern matcher. Noticed that "IF MATCH index.html [a-hj-z]*"
-succeeded when it should have failed. In ckmatch(), the clist section
-needed one more clause: it can't float the pattern if an asterisk does not
-occur in the pattern before the clist. This change fixes the problem
-without breaking any other cases that weren't already broken, most of which
-involve slists, i.e. {string,string,string,...}. ckclib.c, 30 Dec 2005.
-
-Tried FSEEK /FIND: on a largish file (over 100,000 lines), using it to seek
-to a line near the end. It took 0.756 seconds, compared with Unix grep,
-which did the same thing in 0.151 sec. That's because C-Kermit is using
-ckmatch(). But if the search target is not a pattern, it should be a bit
-faster to use ckindex(). Yup, 0.554 sec, a 36% improvement. Can't expect
-to compete with grep, though; it's highly tuned for its single purpose.
-ckclib.[ch], ckuus7.c, 1 Jan 2006.
-
-Updated visible copyright dates to 2006: ckcmai.c, ckuus2.c, ckuus5.c,
-1 Jan 2006.
-
-Noticed that NetBSD 2.0.3 has 64-bit off_t, and that _LARGEFILE_SOURCE is
-mentioned in <stdio.h>. Tried building Kermit with _LARGEFILE_SOURCE added
-to CFLAGS, it's good. Added it to the netbsd target. makefile, 1 Jan 2006.
-
-Fixed typo, #ifdef CK_NOLONGLONG in ckuus5.c should have been #ifndef
-CK_LONGLONG (which, it turns out, we don't use anyway). 2 Jan 2005.
-
-Observed that FreeBSD 4.x has a 64-bit off_t, but does not use the
-_LARGEFILE_SOURCE convention. Reasoning that all versions of FreeBSD have
-off_t (I was able to check back to FreeBSD 3.3), I simply #define CK_OFF_T
-to be off_t in ckcdeb.h within #ifdef __FreeBSD__ .. #endif. Another one
-down. This can be done for any platform that is guaranteed to have off_t.
-Turns out FreeBSD 3.3 has 64-bit off_t too. 2 Jan 2005.
-
-OpenBSD, same as FreeBSD. Also, added OS-version-getting thing to makefile
-target for the program herald, as in the other BSDs. Built on OpenBSD 2.5
-from 1998, it has 64-bit off_t too. ckcdeb.h, makefile, 2 Jan 2005.
-
-Dumping the command stack every time there's an error is really too much.
-I added SET COMMAND ERROR-DISPLAY {0,1,2,3} to set the verbosity level of
-error messages. Only level 3 dumps the stack. ckuus[235].c, 2 Jan 2005.
-
-Built on HP-UX 11.11 with _LARGEFILE_SOURCE and _FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64. The
-result works fine as far as I can tell. It sees big files, it can open
-them, seek to positions past the 2^31 boundary. It can send large files.
-It can do large-number arithmetic (^ 2 62). The only problem is that during
-compilation, every single modules warns:
-
- cc: "/usr/include/sys/socket.h", line 504: warning 562: Redeclaration of
- "sendfile" with a different storage class specifier: "sendfile" will have
- internal linkage.
- cc: "/usr/include/sys/socket.h", line 505: warning 562: Redeclaration of
- "sendpath" with a different storage class specifier: "sendpath" will have
- internal linkage.
-
-These warnings should be perfectly harmless since they are not coming from
-C-Kermit code, nor does C-Kermit use either one of those functions. These
-warnings don't come out in HP-UX 11i v2, but on that one we get tons and tons
-of picky compiler warnings (variables set but not used, defined but not
-referenced, etc). A couple, however, turned out to be valid; one case of
-"expression has no effect", and two of "string format incompatible with
-data type" (I missed a couple file-size printfs).
-
-There were also numerous warnings about signedness mismatch or sign
-conversion of constants like IAC (0xff). Does the HP-UX Optimizing Compiler
-have a compiler flag to make all chars unsigned? Yes, +uc, but the man page
-says "Be careful when using this option. Your application may have problems
-interfacing with HP-UX system libraries and other libraries that do not use
-this option". Sigh, better not use it.
-
-After reviewing "HP-UX Large Files White Paper Version 1.4" and HP's
-"Writing Portable Code" documents, I added -D_LARGEFILE_SOURCE
--D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 to the hpux1000 target, which is the basis for all
-HP-UX 10.00 and later builds. Large files are available in HP-UX 10.20 and
-later. 10.00 and 10.10 were not real releases, and anyway these flags
-should be harmless there unless the large-file implementation was only
-partly done. Built OK on both PA-RISC and IA64, optimized and plain.
-makefile, 4 Jan 2006.
-
-Built on FreeBSD 6.0 on IA64. All OK except I got a warning about the
-argument passed to time() in logwtmp() in ckufio.c. This section had
-already been partially fixed; thus I put the improved version into
-#ifdef CK_64BIT, which is our newly available symbol that should be
-automatically defined for any true 64-bit build. ckufio.c, 4 Jan 2006.
-
-Finally got around to testing Jeff's changes to SSL/TLS RAW mode from
-December 30th against our POP server. It didn't work, couldn't log in.
-Tried backing off the ckctel.c changes first; that allowed login and
-communication, but it did not suppress activation of Telnet protocol
-whenever a 0xff byte arrived. Backed off the rest of the changes and now
-all is OK again. ckctel.c, ckcnet.c, ckuus7.c, 9 Jan 2006.
-
-Built on NetBSD 1.4.1 (1999), found that it did not like the large file
-assumption -- fseeko() and ftello() do not exist; added a clause to the
-netbsd target to check for fseeko and not define _LARGEFILE_SOURCE if not
-found. Oddly enough, off_t is 64 bits anyway, but it doesn't look like the
-APIs are half-done. For example, stat() uses off_t (64 bits) for the file
-length, but fseek() uses long (32 bits) and there is no 64-bit analog.
-Anyway the new netbsd target works on both 1.4.1 and 1.5.2 (no large files)
-and on 2.0.3 (large files). makefile, 9 Jan 2006.
-
-Built on QNX-32 4.25, which has no large file support. Got a few strange
-compiler (WatCom) warnings, but it built and runs OK. Noticed that file
-transfers into QNX over a Telnet connection can't use streaming, but that's
-nothing new to this version; same thing happens with C-Kermit 7.0. 9 Jan 2006.
-
-Built on IRIX 6.5. I didn't bother with large files there because it does
-not support the _LARGEFILE_SOURCE interface; you have to change all the APIs
-at the source level from blah() to blah64(). Seems to work fine as a 32-bit
-app even though its off_t is 64 bits. Tried a pure 64-bit IRIX 6.5 build
-but it dies in ckcnet.c when it hits SOCKOPT_T and GSOCKNAME_T with "The
-identifier 'socklen_t' is undefined".
-
-Looks like I no longer have access to SCO OSR5.
-
-Made a pure 32-bit build on SCO UnixWare 7.1.4, all OK. Found that this
-version also supports LFS, added it to the uw7 target. makefile, 9 Jan 2006.
-
---- Dev.11 ---
-
-Evidently the HP-UX bundled (non-ANSI non-optimizing) compiler doesn't like
-long integers in switch expressions. Changed three examples of these in the
-S-expression code. ckuus3.c, 10 Jan 2006.
-
-A section of tstats() where GFTIMER isn't defined (e.g. on Motorola
-sv68r3v6) was garbled. Fixed in ckcfn2.c, 10 Jan 2006.
-
-A fix for setting 921600 bps on Linux from Paul Fulghum, Microgate Systems Ltd.
-ttgspd(): ckutio.c, 11 Jan 2006.
-
-Noticed that when I changed the compact substring notation code back on
-August 9th, I broke the ability to use arithmetic expressions within the
-brackets, which explains some rather odd behavior I saw with some of my
-scripts. Looking more deeply into this, I also see that all the parsers I
-have been using up to now for this, as well as for array bounds pairs, have
-been inadequate because they never allowed for nested constructions, such as
-a member of a bounds pair that itself was an array element, possibly with
-another array element as a subscript. I wrote a new routine for this,
-called boundspair(), which is like arraybounds() except it accepts an extra
-argument, an array of characters that can serve as bounds-pair delimiters,
-and it returns the pair separator that was encountered in another new
-argument. For the alternative substring notation for [startpos-endpos] I
-had to change the delimiter from '-' to '_' because '-' can be used in
-arithmetic but '_' is not a recognized operator. This is so I can parse,
-e.g. [a:b] or [a_b] in the same context, and then find out which form was
-used, e.g. \s(line[9:12]) or \s(line[9_12]); the first string is 4 bytes
-long, the second is 12. Everything seems to be OK now. \s(line[10]) gives
-everything starting at 10, but \s(line[10:0]) gives the null string. Bad
-syntax in the bounds pairs results in a null string; missing pieces of the
-bounds pair result in defaults that should be compatible with previous
-behavior. ckuus[45].c, ckuusr.h, 13 Jan 2005.
-
-Changed arraybounds() to call boundsdpair(). This was a rather drastic
-change, not strictly necessary, but I think I got all the kinks out.
-ckuus5.c, 13 Jan 2005.
-
-Changes from PeterE to the makefile for HP-UX 6 and 7, to accommodate bigger
-symbol tables, etc. 19 Jan 2005.
-
-Determined that SCO OSR5.0.6 (and earlier) do(es) not support large files.
-Don't know about 5.0.7. 30 Jan 2005.
-
-Created a new build target for SCO OSR6.0.0. Gets the exact 6.x.x version
-dynamically. Supports large files and big-number arithmetic via CK_OFF_T.
-The sockopt() family of functions changed the data types of some of their
-arguments since OSR5. It was already possible to define SOCKOPT_T and
-GSOCKNAME_T from the command line but I had to add code to also allow this
-for GPEERNAME_T too. ckcnet.c, makefile, 30 Jan 2005.
-
-Apparently, ever since C-Kermit 7.0 was released, it has never been possible
-to use a variable for the as-name in a RECEIVE command in Kermit 95. This
-is because evaluation of the as-name field was deferred until after we could
-check whether it might be a directory name (which, in Windows, could start
-with a backslash). This little bit of magic was not a good idea, magic
-hardly ever is. I changed the code to evaluate both as-name fields in the
-normal way. If they want to receive to a directory called "\%1", they'll
-just have to spell it differently. The workaround is to turn the whole
-command into a macro and evaluate it before executing it, e.g.:
-
- assign xx receive /as-name:\%1
- do xx
-
-ckuus6.c, 1 Feb 2006.
-
-Built OK on FreeBSD 6.1 on AMD64. Adjusted some copyrights and date stamps.
-ckcmai.c, makefile, 8 Feb 2006.
-
---- Dev.12 ---
-
-Fixed a signed/unsigned char warning in the new boundspair() calling code
-in the compact substring notation handler. ckuus4.c, 9 Feb 2006.
-
-Removed a spurious extra linux+openssl label from the makefile, added
-solaris10g_64 synonym. 9 Feb 2006.
-
-Satisfied myself that LFS is OK on Solaris 10 i386, and I'm going to assume
-it's also OK on Solaris 9. Made LFS standard for all Solaris 9 and 10
-builds (including the secure ones) except the explicitly 64-bit ones, and
-made the provisional solarisXXlfs targets into synonyms. makefile, 9 Feb 2006.
-
---- Dev.13 ---
-
-Further attempts at SSL/TLS message suppression when QUIET is ON.
-ck_ssl.c, 16 Feb 2006.
-
-From J.Scott Kasten: (quote...) I just uploaded a patch to /kermit/incoming.
-The file name is "jsk-patch-for-cku211.diff". I have also included the
-patch as ASCII text in this email below. This patch may be applied to the
-cku211.tar.gz source code via:
- cd cku211, patch -p1 <../jsk-patch-for-cku211.diff
-The patch adds 4 new build targets:
- netbsdwoc - a stripped no curses target for iksd used.
- netbsdse - security enhanced target with srp, ssl, and zlib.
- irix65gcc - build on SGI Irix 6.5 platform using gcc.
- irix65se - security enhanced target with srp, ssl, and zlib.
-The patch fixes one build target:
- irix64gcc - The "-s" option is not supported by gcc under Irix.
-I thank all of you in the Kermit Project for such a fine utility. I
-recently had to get a 16 MB file overseas across a spotty communications
-link to repair a computer remotely. Kermit was the only thing that could do
-the job, so I wanted to contribute these patches back to the mainstream to
-say thanks. This digitally signed email is a binding contract that
-officially assigns the rights to the source code patch (shown below) that I
-developed to the Kermit Project at Columbia University. (...end quote)
-ck_ssl.c, makefile, 23 Feb 2006.
-
-Changed the new NetBSD target names to be consistent with the conventions
-used in most other targets:
-
- netbsdwoc -> netbsdnc
- netbsdse -> netbsd+ssl+srp+zlib
- irix65se -> irix65+ssl+srp+zlib
-
-and removed old, now superfluous, NetBSD targets (old-netbsd, netbst15,
-netbst16), leaving synonym labels in their place. Also updated (crudely)
-the Linux target variations (curses instead of nocurses, no curses at all)
-to be (appropriately modified) copies of the current linux target. It would
-be nicer to combine them, but this gets the job done. makefile, 23 Feb 2006.
-
---- Dev.14 ---
-
-Fixed the HELP command when used with tokens like @, ^, #, and ;. The first
-two had been omitted from the table. The second two required a new path
-into the guts of the parser, since comments are normally stripped at a very
-low level. ckuus[r2].c, ckucmd.c, 24 Feb 2006.
-
-Built on AIX 5.1 ("make aix51") without incident. Then I tried:
-
- make aix51 "KFLAGS=-D_LARGEFILE_SOURCE -D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64"
-
-This had no effect. I found the relevant document ath the IBM website. It
-says to use -D_LARGE_FILES instead. I added this to the AIX 4.2 target
-since (a) IBM says large files are supported by AIX 4.2 and later, and (b)
-all Kermit AIX targets past 4.2 use the 4.2 one. Plus a clause to make
-sure CK_OFF_T is defined appropriately. ckcdeb.h, makefile, 6 Mar 2006.
-
-Added a 32-bit aix51+openssl target. Builds OK, works fine (tested against
-our SSL POP server). Tried I tried adding -D_LARGE_FILES. It seems to work
-fine, so we'll keep it. Cleaned up the other aix5blah entries a bit also.
-makefile, 6 Mar 2006.
-
-Fixes from J. Scott Kasten to the IRIX 6.4 and 6.5 makefile targets. They
-were badly wrong. makefile, 6 Mar 2006.
-
-The reason Kermit was looping on directories in IRIX was a classic
-"double-ended break". The makefile targets failed to define DIRENT so
-Kermit was open/read on directories rather than opendir()/readdir(). But
-then it was also failing to account for the fact that read() would return -1
-on error. The makefile fix adds -DDIRENT, and the read() case in traverse()
-now properly terminates its loop on error. ckufio.c, 6 Mar 2006.
-
---- Dev.14 ---
-
-In response to a complaint that C-Kermit would not build on HP-UX 11 with
-OpenSSL, I tried it myself on both 11.11/PA-RISC and 11i v2/Itanium. It built
-OK on both but I had to add a new target (hpux1000o+openssl-nozlib) for no
-Zlib since these boxes did not have it installed. makefile, 9 Mar 2006.
-
-Added OpenSSL version number display to SHOW FEATURES. ckuus5.c, 9 Mar 2006.
-
-Gavin Graham noticed that FTP [M]GET /DELETE /MOVE-TO: was rejected with
-"?Sorry, /DELETE conflicts with /MOVE or /RENAME". This check belongs in the
-PUT code but not in the GET code. Commented it out and tested the result.
-The combination is now accepted but then Kermit refuses the incoming file as
-if it had been given a /SMALLER-THAN: or /LARGER-THAN: switch, which it didn't
-happen. Turns out there was one more place where I wasn't initializing the
-new "wide int" member of the switch-parsing pv[] struct. Once this was fixed,
-the /MOVE-TO part still didn't work. Turned out the /DELETE case was part of
-a long if-else-if-else- chain, which effectively made /DELETE and /MOVE-TO: or
-/RENAME-TO: mutually exclusive. Fixed this, now it works fine. ckcftp.c,
-13 Mar 2006.
-
-Got access to AIX 5.3, built there, all OK, including large files. 13 Mar 2006.
-
---- Dev.16 ---
-
-Patches from Mark Sapiro to suppress getsockopt() and getsockname() warnings
-in Mac OS X. ckcnet.[ch], 18 Mar 2006.
-
-In response to a complaint from Clarence Dold, tried "make redhat9" (which
-is the rather dated target that tried to include all forms of security) on
-RH Linux AS4.3, it failed miserably. I made a new makefile target, removing
-Kerberos IV and got a lot farther. But then in ckcftp.c, the following
-struct definition:
-
- struct {
- CONST gss_OID_desc * CONST * mech_type;
- char *service_name;
- } gss_trials[] = {
- { &ck_gss_mech_krb5, "ftp" },
- { &ck_gss_mech_krb5, "host" },
- };
-
-refers to a variable, ck_gss_mech_krb5, that is not defined anywhere. Up
-above, however, is a static definition for gss_mech_krb5, so I changed the
-struct definition to match. Next, in ckuath.c, the compiler could not find
-the com_err.h file. Turns out in Linux this is in a subdirectory, et, so we
-have to add a -I clause to the makefile target for this. Made a target for
-Linux+SSL only. Made a target for Linux+Krb5 only; this required moving an
-#ifdef in ckuus7.c to prevent an unguarded reference to SSLEAY_VERSION.
-New targets: linux+krb5+ssl, linux+krb5, linux+krb5. ckcftp.c, ckuus7.c,
-makefile, 27 Mar 2006.
-
-New targets of HP-UX 10/11 with OpenSSL from PeterE. makefile, 27 Mar 2006.
-
-Added large file/integer support to SHOW FEATURES. ckuus5.c, 27 Mar 2006.
-
-Built OK on Solaris 9 and 10 with gcc (someone was complaining that this
-didn't work, but that was 8.0.211).
-
-Started build on a Sun 3/80 mc68030 with NetBSD 2.0 and gcc 3.3.3. But it
-died with an assembler error in ckcfn2.c (compiler bug). 27 Mar 2006.
-
---- Dev.17 ---
-
-NebBSD 2.0 build completed by turning off optimization on ckcfn2.c
-("KFLAGS=-O0"). Result supports 64-bit ints and, presumably, large files.
-uname -p = "m68k", -m = "sun3". 29 Mar 2006.
-
-Corrected an omission in applying PeterE's updates to the HP-UX targets.
-makefile, 28 Mar 2006.
-
-solaris2xg+krb5+krb4+openssl+shadow:
-
-Tried resurrecting the solaris2xg+krb5+krb4+openssl+shadow target. It asks
-to link with libdes but there is no libdes. Removed -ldes from the target,
-now at least it builds and runs wart. The compilation blows up in ckcftp.c
-for missing header files:
-
- ckcftp.c:462: kerberosIV/krb.h: No such file or directory
- ckcftp.c:500: gssapi/gssapi_generic.h: No such file or directory
- ckcftp.c:501: gssapi/gssapi_krb5.h: No such file or directory
-
-Got a bit farther by adding appropriate -I's and -L's to KFLAGS but it still
-dies compiling (or linking?) ckcftp.c, but it doesn't say exactly why. OK,
-deferred.
-
-Added SET SEXPRESSION TRUNCATE-ALL-RESULTS { ON, OFF }. This can be used
-for force integer arithmetic in any kind of calculation that requires it,
-such as date calculations. This is a global setting, not on any kind of
-stack. Also, updated SHOW SEXP and added HELP SET SEXP which wasn't there
-before. ckuus[23].c, 30 Mar 2006.
-
-To make the RENAME command a bit more useful, need to add some switches.
-But it shares a switch table, qvswtab[], with some other commands. Broke
-this off into its own switch table. ckuus6.c, 17 Apr 2006.
-
-Added RENAME switch values that can be used in the same table with the DELETE
-switch values, which are shared by many commands. ckuusr.h, 17 Apr 2006.
-
-Discovered that the RENAME command could be entered without any arguments
-and it would still succeed. Fixed in dorenam(): ckuus6.c, 17 Apr 2006.
-
-Added parsing for RENAME /UPPER:option (to uppercase the file name(s)),
-/LOWER:option (to lowercase), and /REPLACE:{{s1}{s2}} (to do string
-replacement on the filename(s)), but not the semantics. When any of these
-switches is given, the target ("to") name is not parsed; they act on the
-source name. The /LOWER: switch takes keyword args to specify whether it
-should act only only files that have all UPPER case latters, or on ALL files
-(i.e., including files with mixed-case names); similarly for the /UPPER:
-switch. There is some creative parsing allowing these to be given with or
-without a colon and keyword argument, which works fine except if you include
-the colon but no argument, execute the command (which works fine), and then
-recall the command. I haven't yet decided about the interaction among these
-switches. Clearly if /UPPER is given after /LOWER, it overrides. But if
-/UPPER (or /LOWER) is given with /REPLACE, what should happen? ckuus6.c,
-17 Apr 2006.
-
-Filled in actions for RENAME /UPPER: and /LOWER: for the single file case,
-and tested all combinations of switch values and filename configurations.
-Once that was OK, moved the code out into a separate routine, renameone(),
-and then called it from both the single-file case and the multifile case.
-ckuus6.c, 19 Apr 2006.
-
-Added RENAME /SIMULATE. Filled in the code for string replacement, needs
-testing. ckuus6.c, 20 Apr 2006.
-
-Changed /REPLACE options to allow a negative number to specify an occurrence
-from the right, so -1 means the last occurrence, -2 means the next-to-last,
-etc. ckuus6.c, 24 Apr 2006.
-
-Added RENAME /COLLISION:{OVERWRITE,PROCEED,FAIL}. This is implemented but
-not tested. ckuus6.c, 24 Apr 2006.
-
-Worked on RENAME /COLLISION:FAIL. I decided it was less than useful to ...
-
-Added SET RENAME { COLLISION, LIST } to let user change default collision
-and listing actions. ckuusr.[ch], ckuus[36].c, 25 Apr 2006.
-
-Experimented with parsing for /CONVERT:cset1:cset2. The problem here is
-that there is no straightforward way for a switch to have multiple
-arguments. Or is there...? If I parse cset1 with cmswi() rather than
-cmkey(), it almost works; the only problem is that the character-set
-keywords don't have CM_ARG set, so they don't know to stop on, and ignore, a
-colon. If I make a copy of the table and set CM_ARG in the flags field for
-each keyword, it works fine: if I Tab in the first name, it fills itself
-out, supplies a colon, and waits for the second name. So in the code, the
-first time that RENAME /CONVERT is invoked, I put code to copy fcstab[] and
-set CM_ARG in each flags field. Works fine, and now we know how to make a
-switch that takes multiple arguments. ckuus6.c, 24 Apr 2006.
-
-I thought I had a function to convert the character set of a string but I
-don't, so actually implementing /CONVERT: will be difficult.
-
-Actually the parsing wasn't that easy either. It works OK interactively,
-but not in a TAKE file. To make a long story short, I had to change
-gtword() and cmkey2() to not require "/" at the beginning of a switch, and
-then to parse arguments-that-are-followed-by-other-arguments as if they were
-switches, so that they can end with colon rather than space. This might
-seem dangerous, but switches always have "/" at the beginning, so the check
-is superfluous. ckucmd.c, 26 Apr 2006.
-
-Back to /CONVERT... Once I was able to get the code to call cvtstring() I
-was able to debug it (at first it was skipping every second character). And
-now we have a general-purpose string-translating function we can call from
-anywhere. Requires that C-Kermit be built with Unicode support.
-ckuus6.c, 26 Apr 2006.
-
-Added SHOW RENAME. ckuusr.h, ckuus[r5].c, 26 Apr 2006.
-
-Conditionalized some Unix/Windows assumptions in renameone() so the code
-could work in VMS. ckuus6.c, 2 May 2006.
-
-Added RENAME /FIXSPACES to change all spaces in the filename(s) to
-underscore or any other character or string that is given. This is just a
-special case of RENAME /REPLACE:{{ }{x}} with easier syntax.
-ckuusr.h, ckuus6.c, 2 May 2006.
-
-Added an "all-but" control to the /REPLACE options:
-/REPLACE:{{.}{_}{~1}} means replace all but the first (this one works);
-/REPLACE:{{.}{_}{~-1}} means replace all but the last (this one not yet).
-ckuus6.c, 2 May 2006.
-
-Filled in the second one ("all but" the given occurrence). The algorithm is
-simply to reverse the three strings and then use the same code as we use in
-the left-right-case, and then unreverse the result. At first I used
-yystring() for this but yikes, what a bad design! So I made a better
-string-reversal routine, gnirts(), for this (luckily yystring() is only used
-in one place, for which its design is appropriate). ckuus6.c, 3-4 May 2006.
-
-Added code to handle the case where the file being renamed includes a path
-specification. In this case we separate the path, apply the renaming
-functions to the filename only, and then at the end rejoin the original
-filename with the path, and join the new name with same path or, if a
-destination directory was given, with that. ckuus6.c, 4 May 2006.
-
-Added HELP SET RENAME and updated HELP RENAME. ckuus2.c, 4 May 2006.
-
-"Tom Violin" (Tom Hansen) noticed that the first time you FOPEN a file,
-Kermit's memory consumption goes way up. In fact there's a warning to that
-effect in the code, where, upon first open, a potentially big array of
-potentially big structs is allocated. I rewrote the code to allocate each
-array member (struct ckz_file) as needed, i.e. when a file is opened, and to
-free it when the file is closed (or the open fails). This was actually
-quite a lot of work, which is why I didn't do it the first time around:
-every single "." had to be changed to "->". Every check for a valid
-channel first had to check if the channel's struct was allocated and every
-other reference to z_file[i]->anything had to be prechecked that z_file[i]
-was not a NULL pointer. Also I made some improvements to FILE STATUS, and I
-fixed FILE CLOSE to default the channel number if only one channel was open,
-as I did for FILE STATUS a while back. ckuus7.c, Cinco de mayo 2006.
-
-Ran my old BUILDS script that builds C-Kermit with about 100 different
-combinations of feature-selection switches. Fixed a few small glitches so
-now they all build OK (except can't do NOANSI builds any more on recent
-Linuxes because of varargs()). ckuus3.c, ckuus5.c, ckuus6.c, ckuus7.c,
-ckucmd.c, ckcfns.c, 6 May 2006.
-
-Fixed RENAME /LOWER and /UPPER, when given with no colon or agrument, to
-default to ALL. ckuus6.c, 13 May 2006.
-
-Built on VMS 7.2-1, tested new RENAME command there; seems to be OK.
-13 May 2006.
-
---- Dev.18 ---
-
-I wanted to test large files against RESEND but I don't have access to any
-system that can run C-Kermit and that also has enough space for a large
-file. I created a "fake" large file on Linux (3G hole plus 1 byte), and
-sent it over a localhost connection, and interrupted it repeatedly and then
-initiated a RESEND at the sender. In each case, it picked up where it left
-off. But before the 2G boundary was crossed the disk filled up.
-Inconclusive. 14 May 2006.
-
-PeterE got a warning in the new FILE OPEN code when building in HP-UX 9.
-I added a cast, built on HP-UX 11, no more complaint. However there
-are warnings about internal vs external bindings of sendpath and sendfile
-in every module. Too bad, these are not Kermit tokens, it's a conflict in
-HP's header files. Marc Sapiro doesn't see them; probably it's something
-on the HP testdrive site. ckuus7.c, 17 May 2006.
-
-Fixed the tru64-51b+openssl target -- the terminating doublequote of KFLAGS
-was missing -- and also the osf target, which failed to import the LIBS
-definition from whatever other target invoked it. Now the SSL build goes OK
-on Tru64 5.1B. Replaced x.tar.z in the download areas without declaring a
-new Dev number. The new one has a makefile with today's date. Software
-engineering at its best! makefile, 18 May 2006.
-
-Scott Kasten noted that the estimated-time-remaining calculation would go
-bonkers on LFS systems when RESENDing a large file. It looks like the
-shocps() and shoetl() functions escaped the CK_OFF_T conversion. I made
-what seemed to be the right adjustments, and then was lucky enough to find a
-computer that had enough free disk space for me to send a large file,
-interrupt it several times, resend it, all seems to be OK. 28 May 2006.
-Later Scott verified these changes independently for Linux, but the problems
-in IRIX remain.
-
-Patches from Scott Kasten for large files on IRIX 6.5: ckcdeb.h, makefile,
-12 Jun 2006.
-
---- Dev.19 ---
-
-Added a new function for dealing with JPGs and GIFs:
-
-\fpicture(filename,&a)
- returns 0 if file not recognized or can't be opened;
- returns 1 if landscape, 2 if portrait or square.
- If array given, element 1 is width, element 2 is height.
-
-ckuusr.h, ckuus4.c, 19 Jun 2006.
-
-Scott Kasten reports that the FTP client can transfer large files OK, at
-least in Linux, but has trouble with recovery:
-
- . Kermit takes a very long time to start the transfer, sometimes over
- 30 minutes. Suspect the ftp server is counting the bytes in a long file?
- Or maybe it's a text-mode transfer and it's counting the lines? Probably
- in response to Kermit's SIZE command.
-
- . The size shown in the FT display is wrong by a random amount. And of
- course so are the progress bar, percent done, and time remaining.
-
- . The file, however, is transferred correctly. REGET works correctly too.
-
-I tried setting up a test scenario locally but our Solaris FTP server does
-not support large files:
-
- FTP SENT [SIZE BIGFILE]
- FTP RCVD [550 BIGFILE: not a plain file.]
- FTP SENT [PASV]
- FTP RCVD [227 Entering Passive Mode (128,59,48,24,246,37)]
- FTP SENT [RETR BIGFILE]
- FTP RCVD [550 BIGFILE: Value too large for defined data type.]
-
-Created the same 3GB on a Tru64 Unix system that allows FTP access. Made
-the connection from C-Kermit on Solaris (32-bit with LFS):
-
- 16:46:12.908 FTP SENT [SIZE BIGFILE]
- 16:46:12.947 FTP RCVD [213 3000000001]
-
-Note that it takes less than half a second to get the reply. Now I start
-the download and then interrupt it at about 2%:
-
- 16:46:12.979 FTP SENT [TYPE I]
- 16:46:13.174 FTP RCVD [200 Type set to I.]
- 16:46:13.226 FTP SENT [PASV]
- 16:46:13.262 FTP RCVD [227 Entering Passive Mode (15,170,178,171,11,37)]
- 16:46:13.299 FTP SENT [RETR BIGFILE]
- 16:46:13.337 FTP RCVD [150 Opening BINARY mode data connection for BIGFILE..]
- 16:47:24.895 FTP RCVD [426 Transfer aborted. Data connection closed.]
- 16:47:24.934 FTP RCVD [226 Abort successful]
- 16:47:24.991 FTP SENT [MDTM BIGFILE]
- 16:47:25.028 FTP RCVD [213 20060706204458]
-
-Now I do a REGET:
-
- 16:51:55.321 FTP SENT [PASV]
- 16:51:55.357 FTP RCVD [227 Entering Passive Mode (15,170,178,171,11,43)]
- 16:51:55.394 FTP SENT [REST 122736640]
- 16:51:55.430 FTP RCVD [350 Restarting at 122736640. Send STORE or RETRIEVE..]
- 16:51:55.431 FTP SENT [RETR BIGFILE]
- 16:51:55.469 FTP RCVD [150 Opening BINARY mode data connection for BIGFILE..]
-
-This worked perfectly, as far as I can tell; the FT display picked up in the
-right place; the thermometer, percent done, and estimated time remaining
-were the same as when we left off last time. I did the same thing several
-more times, everything was OK. It would have taken a really long time to
-let this run to completion, but I think this demonstrates that Scott's
-symptoms are server-dependent. No changes. 6 July 2006.
-
-Checked current code on VMS 8.2-1 on IA64 / UCX 5.5, builds fine.
-No changes. Updated listing at HP. 6 July 2006.
-
-Checked FTP GET of large file in ASCII mode against Tru64 FTP server. It
-was fine, and there was no delay in the server's response to our SIZE command
-(as there would be if it were scanning the entire file to count how many
-bytes would be required to send it in text mode). 7 Jul 2006.
-
-Tested FTP PUT big file against Tru64, OK. Ditto FTP RESEND big file:
-
- C-Kermit>resend BIGFILE
- PUT BIGFILE (binary) (3000000001 bytes)---> PASV
- 227 Entering Passive Mode (15,170,178,171,13,186)
- ---> SIZE BIGFILE
- 213 343211280
- ---> MDTM BIGFILE
- 213 20060707141243
- ---> APPE BIGFILE
- 150 Opening BINARY mode data connection for BIGFILE (128.59.59.56,45470).
-
-Made REPUT a synonym for RESEND. ckuusr.c, 7 Jul 2006.
-
-Added FTP REPUT and FTP RESEND since previously there was no FTP-prefixed
-command for recovering uploads, only the regular RESEND command, which might
-not have been obvious to people. ckcftp.c, 7 Jul 2006.
-
-Added help text for FTP RESEND and REPUT and amended RESEND help text.
-ckcftp.c, ckuus2.c, 7 Jul 2006.
-
-Changed name of \fpicture() to \fpictureinfo() and added help text. By the
-way, ImageMagick can do this too: identify -format "%w %h" dscf0520.jpg.
-The advantage of having it in Kermit is that not everybody has ImageMagick.
-ckuus[24].c, 7 Jul 2006.
-
-Changed the numeric comparisons = < > <= >= != to allow long integers by
-changing the data type to CK_OFF_T, etc. ckuus6.c, 7 Jul 2006.
-
-Noticed that \fkeywordvalue(foo=this is a string) only kept the first word.
-Fixed it to keep the whole definition. Also added \fkwvalue() as a briefer
-synomym. ckuus4.c, 7 Jul 2006
-
-Sometimes we want to check if a file's status before we've FOPEN'd it, in
-which case the channel variable is likely to be empty and \f_status(\%c)
-would get an error. Making the obvious change didn't fix this, however. It
-turns out that the function evaluator failed to adjust argn (argument count)
-when trailing arguments were empty, and argn was being used in this case,
-and probably others, to test whether an argument existed. I added code to
-adjust argn to reflect the number of aruments up to and including the
-rightmost non-empty one. ckuus4.c, 7 Jul 2006.
-
-Fixed \fstripb() to not dump core if second argument is missing.
-ckuus4.c, 7 Jul 2006.
-
-Discovered that it was not obvious what pattern to use to match strings
-enclosed in square brackets. "if match [abc] \[*\]" didn't work. Neither
-did various other tricks like NCRs for the brackets. However, "if match
-[abc] \\[*\\]" does work. Trying to fix this would no doubt break 100 other
-things, so let's call it a feature. 7 Jul 2006.
-
-Added \fgetpidinfo(n) to return info about a process ID; for now it simply
-returns 1 if the process is alive and 0 if not (or -1 if the argument is
-bad or missing or on any kind of error). ckuusr.h, ckuus[24].c, 7 Jul 2006.
-
-The "where-did-my-file-go" message seemed to be ending with a LF rather
-than CRLF, probably because the terminal modes had not yet been restored,
-leaving the next prompt hanging below it, rather than on the left margin,
-if C-Kermit exited immediately after the transfer. Fixed by changing
-all \n's to \r\n's in wheremsg(): ckcpro.w, 8 Jul 2006.
-
-Added \v(lastkwval) so we can retrieve programmatically the keyword most
-recently processed by \fkeywordval(). ckuusr.h, ckuus4.c, 9 Jul 2006.
-
---- Dev.20 ---
-
-Added #ifdef SV68, #include <unistd.h>, #endif because Unix System V/68 on
-Motorola choked on the SEEK_CUR reference without it. ckuus4.c, 10 Jul 2006.
-
-Make \fkeywordval(xxx) undefine xxx (i.e. when a keyword is given with no
-value). This way command-line keywords will always override preexisting
-default definitions, whether they have a value or not, which makes it easier
-to parse command lines like "foo=bar blah xx=yy". ckuus[24].c, 12 Jul 2006.
-
-On 29 Nov 2005 I changed IF KERBANG to solve a problem (see entry for that
-date), but introduced a new one; namely that you can't have (e.g.) a FATAL
-macro that uses IF KERBANG to decide whether to EXIT all the way or STOP
-back to the prompt. Changed it again, this time to require not that the
-command level be 1, but that the command *file* level be 0 (i.e. that we are
-in the top-level command file, irrespective of the command or macro level,
-but not in a subfile). ckuus6.c, 12 Jul 2006.
-
-It is unhelpful when Kermit gets a syntax error in the middle of a big
-compound statement block (e.g. FOR or WHILE loop) and dumps out the whole
-thing in an error message. I changed the two places where this can happen
-to call a new routine that, instead of dumping out the entire cmdbuf,
-checks its length first and if it's more than a line long, truncates it
-and adds an ellipsis. ckuus6.c, 12 Jul 2006.
-
-The new RENAME command didn't give very good error messages, e.g. if the
-filespec didn't match any files. Fixed in dorenam(): ckuus6.c, 12 Jul 2006.
-
-Fixed DIR /TOP to work if the /TOP:n argument was omitted, defaulting
-to 10. domydir(): ckuus6.c, 12 Jul 2006.
-
-Added DIR /COUNT:v to count the number of files that match the given
-criteria and store result in the variable v. ckuusr.h, ckuus[r26].c,
-24 Aug 2006.
-
-Added HDIRECTORY as an invisible synonym for DIR /SORT:SIZE /REVERSE.
-Can be used with other switches, of course, so (e.g.) HD /TOP shows the
-ten biggest files. ckuusr.h, ckuus[r26].c, 24 Aug 2006.
-
-DIR /FOLLOWLINKS and /NOFOLLOWLINKS always did the same thing; the switch
-was ignored, a symlink is always followed. Fixed in ckuus6.c, 24 Aug 2006.
-
-Added DIR /NOLINKS, which means don't show or count symlinks at all.
-ckuusr.h, ckuus[r26].c, 24 Aug 2006.
-
-Build on Solaris 9 and NetBSD 3.0, 24 Aug 2006.
-
-Added a missing definition for LOCK_DIR in the Linux HAVE_BAUDBOY case,
-suggested by Gerry Belanger. ckutio.c, 6 Oct 2006.
-
-Suggested by Jim Crapuchettes: \v(dialmessage) is the text string
-corresponding to \v(dialstatus). ckuusr.h, ckuus4.c, 6 Oct 2006.
-
-Soewono Effendi sent code for exit sequence to leave DTR on; this amounted
-to unsetting HPUCL in c_cflag. I did it a simpler way, hopefully portable
-to all Unixes, but who knows at this late date. The code is inside
-#ifndef CK_NOHUPCL..#endif in case it causes trouble. It is executed if
-SET EXIT HANGUP is OFF and a serial port was open at the time Kermit exits
-(or closes it explicitly). ttclos(): ckutio.c, 6 Oct 2006.
-
-Built on Solaris9/Sparc; FreeBSD 6.2/AMD64; NetBSD 3.0/i386; HP-UX 11i v2;
-SCO OSR6.00.
-
---- Dev.21 ---
-
-Added netbsd+openssl target to makefile. Built OK (NetBSD 3.0, OpenSSL
-0.9.7d) except with some warnings in ck_crp.c. Connects and logs in OK to a
-secure site. 10 Oct 2006.
-
-Added a debug statement to ftp_hookup() to record the TCP port that was used.
-ckcftp.c, 11 Oct 2006.
-
-Built with OpenSSL 0.9.7l on Solaris 9. Built with OpenSSL 0.9.8d on
-Solaris 9; connects and logs in to a secure site. 11 Oct 2006.
-
-The new RENAME command didn't work if both the source and destination names
-included directory segments, e.g. "rename /tmp/foo ~/bar" (see notes of
-4 May 2006). This was fixed in renameone() by a special case in which
-the second argument is given but it is a filename, not a directory name.
-ckuus6.c, 11 Oct 2006.
-
-Fixed unguarded reference to dialmsg[] for \fdialmessage(), noticed by
-Gerry Belanger. ckuus4.c, 12 Oct 2006.
-
-Added a TOUCH command that does what UNIX touch does: creates the file if it
-does not exist, updates the timestamp if it does. If a wildcard is given,
-it operates only on existing files. It shares the DIRECTORY command parser,
-so all the same file selection switches can be given. ckuusr.[ch],
-ckuus[26].c, 12 Oct 2006.
-
-PeterE noticed that if you FOPEN a file, do some seeks or reads, then FCLOSE
-it, then FOPEN it again (or open a different one), some of the old
-information is still there (e.g. current line number). This is an artifact
-of the changes of May 4th. Now the file closing and opening routines are a
-bit more careful about scrubbing and initializing the file info struct.
-ckuus7.c, 12 Oct 2006.
-
---- Dev.22 ---
-
-Built OK on Red Hat Linux AS4 with both "make linux" and "make linuxnc".
-15 Oct 2006.
-
-DIRECTORY /BRIEF ignored file selection switches and always listed all
-files. This was because of how I cleverly called filhelp() (the routine
-that lists matching files when ? is typed in a filename field) and, of
-course, filhelp() doesn't know anything about the DIRECTORY command's file
-selections. Changed filhelp() to accept all the args needed for passing
-along to fileselect(), renamed it to xfilhelp(), and made a filhelp() stub
-that chains to xfilhelp() with null selections. ckcker.h, ckucmd.[ch],
-ckuus6.c, 29 Nov 2006.
-
-SHOW CONNECTION for an SSH connection said the connection type was "NET"
-rather than "SSH". Fixed in dolognet(): ckuus3.c, 29 Nov 2006.
-
-SHOW CONNECTION didn't show the TCP port number. This command works by
-parsing the current connection log entry string, which doesn't have a field
-for this, but which sometimes shows the port number as part of the hostname
-(but more often not). Added code to dolognet() to log the TCP port number,
-if known. This involved adding a gettcpport() function to ckcnet.c.
-ckcnet.[ch], ckuus3.c, 29 Nov 2006.
-
-This was impossible: def \%1 upper, echo \f\%1(abc) -- i.e. to "compose" a
-function name. Fixed in zzstring(). But note that it's still not possible
-to do this: def \%1 \fupper, echo \%1(abc) -- because at the point where
-"\fupper" is encountered, which is automatically fed to fneval(), the
-argument list hasn't been read yet. ckuus4.c, 29 Nov 2006.
-
-The meaningless Lisp command (=) would cause Kermit to hang. Due to some
-idiosyncracy in the parser, it would see this as ((=) and would go into
-"wait for the closing paren" mode. There was already a hack in the code to
-compensate for this, but it didn't work. I fixed the hack but I don't
-understand the real problem. Anyway, comparing Kermit with real (Franz)
-Lisp I discovered that comparison operators do not require two arguments, as
-Kermit has been doing, although they do require at least one. I changed
-Kermit to not require two, so now all the comparison predicates behave
-exactly like Franz Lisp, including getting an error if there are no args).
-ckuus[r3].c, 29 Nov 2006.
-
-From to-do list: Make a way to inhibit pattern matching in SWITCH labels.
-It's already there; just quote the wildcard characters; the only trick is
-that for some reason (such as that SWITCH is really an internally defined
-macro), a double quote is needed:
-
- switch \%1 {
- :a\\*z, echo literally "a*z", break
- :abcxyz, echo literally "abcxyz", break
- :a*z, echo a...z, break
- :default, echo NO MATCH
- }
-
-In first case, the asterisk is taken literally; in the third it's a
-metacharacter and the label matches any string that starts with 'a' and
-ends with 'z'.
-
-Array initializion would quit early if any initializers were undefined,
-e.g. "decl \&a[] = \%a \%b \%c" would stop at the first element if \%b
-was not defined, even though \%c might be defined. Fixed in dodcl():
-ckuusr.c, 30 Nov 2006.
-
-DIR /ARRAY:a filespec, when the filespec does not match any files,
-terminates with the array undeclared. It would be better to return a
-declared but empty array (\&a[0] = 0). The code is already there to do
-that, but isn't working. And yet "declare \&a[0]" does indeed create a
-0-element array ("show array" shows a dimension of 0). Turns out there were
-two problems; one was the careless recycling of a local variable ("array"),
-resulting in failure to create \&a[] (but not any other array). Fixed in
-domydir(): ckuus6.c, 30 Nov 2006.
-
-The other problem was that dclarray(), when called with an array name and a
-dimension of zero, does two different things depending on whether the array
-already existed. There is still a fair amount of confusion about whether a
-dimension of 0 indicates an array with 1 element (as it should) or a
-nonexistent array. We call dclarray() with a size of 0 to undeclare an
-array but we also need to able able to declare an array with only element 0.
-I changed dclarray() to treat a negative dimension as a command to destroy
-the array, and 0 or positive as a command to create the array with the given
-dimension. ckuus[r56].c, 30 Nov 2006.
-
-Next problem: when chkarray() returns 0, this should not be interpreted to
-mean the array does not exist. Looks like the only place this happened was
-in \fcontents(); fixed in ckuus4.c, 30 Nov 2006.
-
-If we include file selectors with DIR /ARRAY:&a and some of the files that
-match the given filespec but don't fit the selectors, the array's dimension
-is bigger than its number of elements. Added code at the end of domydir()
-to resize the array so \fdim() returns the number of filenames in the array,
-and also made sure that element 0 contains that number too. ckuus6.c,
-30 Nov 2006.
-
-This would be a nice elegant way to loop over a bunch of files, if it worked:
-
- for \%i 1 \ffiles(*) 1 { rename \fnextfile() xxx_\flpad(\%i,3,0) }
-
-But in this loop, Kermit skips every other file (beginning with the first)
-and then runs out of files halfway through the loop. Why? Because in
-commands like RENAME and DELETE, the filename parser is in a chained FDB
-with the switch parser. First the switch parser, cmswi(), gets its hands on
-\fnextfile(), passing it through the evaluator and thus getting the first
-filename, which it then sees is not a switch, so now the field is parsed by
-the next parser in the chain, cmifi(), which causes \fnextfile() to be
-executed again. In fact, the FOR loop has nothing to do with; the same
-thing happens like this:
-
- void \ffiles(*)
- delete \fnextfile()
-
-This deletes not the first file, but the second one. Obviously users can be
-told not to refer to \fnextfile() in chained-fdb fields:
-
- for \%i 1 \ffiles(*) 1 { .f := \fnextfile(), delete \m(f) }
-
-but this is hardly intuitive. I had some clever ideas of how to make
-\fnextfile() work as expected in this context but it's way too much magic.
-Better to simply document that \fnextfile() is "deprecated" and the array
-format should be used:
-
- for \%i 1 \ffiles(*,&a) 1 { delete \&a[\%i] }
-
-The difference is, an array element doesn't change every time it's referred to!
-
-Added a /PRESERVE switch to the COPY command to preserve the timestamp and
-permissions of the file. I did this using the Kermit APIs so it should work
-for any version of C-Kermit or K95. ckuus[26].c, 30 Nov 2006.
-
-Added COPY /OVERWRITE:{ALWAYS,NEVER,OLDER,NEWER} to control name collisions
-when copying across directories. ckuus[26].c, 1 Dec 2006.
-
---- Dev.23 ---
-
-Fixed a bug in SET TELNET PROMPT-FOR-USERID, SET AUTH KERBEROS[45] PROMPT,
-and SET AUTH SRP PROMPT in which the user's string was compared with a
-literal (s == ""), reported by Pavol Rusnak. Worse, empty strings (if the
-test succeeded) were turned into null pointers, and then fed to strlen().
-Fixed in ckuus3.c, 5 Dec 2006.
-
-Added an optional 4th argument to \findex(), \frindex(), \fsearch(), and
-\frsearch(): the desired occurrence number of the searched-for string.
-\frsearch() was a bit tricky. ckuus[24].c, 7 Dec 2006.
-
-Added \fcount(s1,s2) to tell the number of occurrences of s1 in s2.
-ckuus[24].c, 8 Dec 2006.
-
-Added \ffunction(s1) to tell if a given built-in function is available.
-ckuus[24].c, 8 Dec 2006.
-
-Changed RENAME /COLLISION:PROCEED to be /COLLISION:SKIP, which is clearer.
-ckuus[26].c, 8 Dec 2006.
-
-For communication protocols: INPUT /COUNT:n to read exactly n characters
-without any matching. Can be used, for example, with CONTENT_LENGTH in CGI
-scripts; NUL characters are counted but not collected. ckuusr.[ch],
-ckuus4.c, 8 Dec 2006.
-
-There was a bad bug in the date-parsing routines; it's been there for years.
-If a date string includes a timezone, e.g. "Sat, 9 Dec 2006 19:26:23 EST",
-and converting to GMT changes the date, the variables for day, month, and
-year (which are used later) were not updated, and the final result was a day
-off. Fixed in cmcvtdate(): ckucmd.c, 10 Dec 2006.
-
-Built OK with SSL/TLS. Tested with the POP script, found that I broke INPUT
-when adding the /COUNT feature; there was a path through the code that could
-leave the "anychar" variable unset and therefore random. Fixed in
-doinput(). The POP script, which does not use /COUNT, works again and so
-does a new CGI script, which does use /COUNT. ckuus4.c, 10 Dec 2006.
-
-Supplied a missing comma in the help-text array for HELP SET TERMINAL, which
-resulted in bad formatting in K95 around SET SNI-FIRMWARE-VERSIONS.
-ckuus2.c, 10 Dec 2006.
-
-Made "help locus" a synonym for "help set locus". ckuusr.[ch], ckuus2.c,
-11 Dec 2006.
-
-This morning the Columbia FTP server was malfunctioning in a perfect way
-for me to implement and test an FTP timeout mechanism. The server would
-close the data connection after sending the file, but the client never saw
-the close and was stuck forever in a recv(). I added code to do a select()
-on the data connection prior to entering the recv(), with a timeout on the
-select() that the user can establish with SET FTP TIMEOUT. Built and tested
-on Solaris 9, clear-text FTP. Also built cleanly for FTPS and tested
-against a server that does not hang; I don't have access to an FTPS server
-that would tickle the timeout code. ckcftp.c, 11 Dec 2006.
-
---- Dev.24 ---
-
-Fixed a bug in the INPUT /COUNT: parser: the array of search strings was
-never initialized, which didn't matter before, but with /COUNT:, if the
-first element was not a NULL pointer, we'd treat it as a search string, and
-then if it happened to match something in the input stream, the operation
-would stop before the count was exhausted. Fixed by (a) initializing the
-array, and (b) ignoring any search strings if /COUNT: was given. ckuusr.c,
-13 Dec 2006.
-
-Removed a debug() statement from zsattr() that suddenly started making some
-version of gcc complain, reported by Gerry Belanger. ckufio.c, 13 Dec 2006.
-
---- Dev.25 ---
-
-Some casts for the 3 interior args of the new select() call in ckcftp.c
-for HP-UX 9. 14 Dec 2006.
-
-Changed \fkeywordvalue() to accept a string rather than a single word
-as its second argument, so that more than one separator could be specified,
-and to return -1 on error, 0 if it found nothing, 1 if given a kewyord but
-no value, and 2 if there was a keyword and a value. dokwval(): ckuus[24].c,
-14 Dec 2006.
-
-Checked FTP timeout on command channel with FTP DIRECTORY of a big directory
-using a path into our ftp server that preserves the hanging behavior. The
-timeout was actually working, but the failure condition wasn't propogating
-back to the user, and there was no error message. Fixed in doftprecv2() and
-failftprecv2(): ckcftp.c, 15 Dec 2006.
-
-Added the obvious timeout checks for FTP uploads, but I have no way to test
-the code since our misbehaving FTP server does not hang when receiving
-files, only when sending them. But uploads work both with and without a
-timeout set, so at least no harm is done. ckcftp.c, 17 Dec 2006.
-
-When downloading with FILE DESTINATION NOWHERE (= /CALIBRATE), Kermit still
-checked the size of the incoming file and refused it if there wasn't enough
-free disk space, on platforms (such as VMS) where zchkspa()) actually works;
-reported by Bob Gezelter. ckcfn3.c, 18 Dec 2006.
-
-Built on Mac OS X 10.4.8 and NetBSD 3.1_RC3, all OK. 19 Dec 2006.
-
---- Dev.26 ---
-
-Built on VMS 7.3-2/Alpha. Had to squelch a couple compiler warnings by
-changing some ints in the new \fpictureinfo() code from unsigned to signed,
-and fix a typo in the prototype for the new gettcpport() function.
-ckcnet.h, ckuus4.c, 22 Dec 2006.
-
---- Dev.27 ---
-
-Parameterized pty routines and all references to them for file descriptor,
-rather than to use global ttyfd, thus allowing ptys to be created for
-different purposes. Tested on Solaris 9 and Mac OS X 10.4.8, with "set host
-/connect /pty emacs" (fine in both cases), and (more to the point) "set host
-/connect /pty kermit" -- here we make a connection from one Kermit process
-to another and transfer a file; works fine and wasn't especially slow either;
-a good sign. ckcdeb.h, ckutio.c, ckupty.c, 22 Dec 2006.
-
-Created a new version of ttruncmd() called ttyptycmd(), which works by
-calling do_pty() to get a pty to run the command on, and then in a loop,
-reads from the pty and writes to the net and reads from the net and writes
-to the pty, using select() to which of those it should do on each pass.
-First cut just uses single-byte reads and writes. Tested using Kermit
-itself as an external protocol. Works but slowly: 6000cps. Zmodem doesn't
-work at all. ckutio.c, 24 Dec 2006.
-
-Changed single-character read() and write() to buffered reads and writes,
-with ttxin() and ttol() used for network i/o. Using Kermit as the external
-protocol, this gives 450Kcps (about 1/3 normal on this connection).
-
-But now there's a problem: the loop doesn't know when to stop. How does it
-know when the process that is running on the pty has exited? With single
-character read()'s that are executed unconditionally when select() says the
-pty has data waiting, as in the first pass, I get EIO if there actually
-isn't any, and can exit the loop. But now, to avoid blocking, I call
-in_chk() to see how much data is waiting, and I don't try to read anything
-if it says nothing is waiting. If the process associated with the pty file
-descriptor has terminated, in_chk() would presumably get some kind of error,
-but it doesn't. I changed do_pty to return the pid of the fork where it
-execs its command so we can check the pid with kill(pid,0) when in_chk() of
-the pty says 0, but this doesn't help either; it seems like the process is
-not exiting, but of course it is.
-
-I could not find any legitimate way to test when the pty fork terminated.
-Select() always says the pty file descriptor was ready, no matter what.
-Select() never reports an exception on the pty file descriptor;
-in_chk(ptyfd) returns 0 and not an error. read(ptyfd,...) gets 0 but not an
-error. fcntl(ptyfd,...) doesn't get an error. Finally I tried
-write(ptyfd,c,0) and this indeed gets EIO (i/o error). With this, using
-Kermit as the external protocol works fine in Solaris but I tend to think
-this trick will not be very portable (it isn't). 24 Dec 2006.
-
-Made ttptycmd() use a more intelligent buffering scheme, fixed a few things
-about how I was setting up the select() call that should address some of
-yesterday's problems. Still doesn't work but it's progress. A: 25 Dec 2006.
-
-Debugging yesterday's code... Still, the error conditions are never set,
-we never detect when the pty closes. In Solaris, if select() says ptyfd is
-ready to read but in_chk() says there are no characters there, we can treat
-this as a loop-exit condition. But in NetBSD, in_chk() always says 0 when
-used on a pty (but works OK on a serial or net connection).
-
-Realized I could not use in_chk() on the pty because there is too much
-baggage with the communication path -- myread(), etc etc) -- so I replaced
-this with a simple ioctl(ptyfd,FIONREAD,&n). This works fine in Solaris but
-always returns 0 in NetBSD, despite what the man page says (i.e. that this
-function can be used on any file descriptor).
-
-OK, let's see.... select() does not return useful results. It says
-characters are waiting on ptyfd when they are not, and it never detects the
-closure of the pty..... Well of course not, because we are the ones who
-have to close it. Just because the process has stopped doesn't mean the pty
-is closed. So we're back to square one, how do we know when to close it?
-ckupty.c seems to keep the process ID in a global variable, pty_fork_pid
-(which is not the same as the pid now returned by do_pty(), which is
-useless, but I don't understand why). But it doesn't matter because when we
-kill(pty_fork_pid,0), we still get no error of any kind, even after we know
-the process has exited. I am completely flummoxed. select() lies, and even
-if it didn't, there is simply no completion criterion. In the loop,
-select() always says that the pty is ready to read. To be continued.
-26 Dec 2006.
-
-Back to Square One, single-byte reads and writes.
-
- . This works for both ripple and Kermit.
- . Doesn't work for Zmodem but we'll deal with that later.
- . In this case FD_ISSET(ptyfd) is still true after pty closes.
-
-But the ensuing read() gets EIO so we know the pty is gone. That means the
-same thing should happen in the buffered version, no? Yes; I went back to
-the buffered version and replaced all the other nonworking tests by a
-blocking read of 1 byte on the pty and this detects the termination. Now:
-
- . ripple works perfectly (of course it's only one-way).
- . Kermit fails
-
-Let's call the remote, forked, redirected, external Kermit A and its
-local partner B. A sends its S-packet, B receives it OK and Acks.
-A apparently does not receive the ACK in time, so sends the S again, but OK.
-followed immediately by the F. B Acks the F. A sends the A, B Acks it.
-But now A sends a piece of the previous F packet and the the first piece
-of a D packet.
-
-Clearly the buffering is messed up. Sure enough, there was an extraneous
-statement incrementing a read pointer in a write section. Removing that
-cleared up the problems with Kermit, now we can send and receive substantial
-files efficiently in remote mode. Zmodem seems to work too, except that at
-the beginning a bunch of "**B0800000000022d"'s are stuffed into Kermit's
-command buffer, so after the transfer we get some error messages.
-
-In local mode, over a Telnet connection, Kermit works fine. Zmodem works
-OK too except it doesn't finish right, so at the very end rz on the far end
-is still waiting for something; if I cancel out of it with ^X^X^X^X^X, it
-deletes the file. So there still is something wrong with the termination
-test.
-
-Also you don't see anything on your screen when running Kermit or Zmodem
-this way. That's to be expected, since they are using stdio for the
-transfer, so they can't also be displaying progress or other messages.
-
-Built this on NetBSD again... Seems to work this time, but has trouble
-finishing, like Zmodem. Hmmm, on closer examination, it turns out that
-since in_chk() always returns 0 on the ptyfd, we fall into our new
-single-byte read code, so it's really slow, like 10K cps on a connection
-where 1M is the norm. 27 Dec 2006.
-
-Switched the pty from buffer peeking (FIONREAD) and blocking reads to to
-nonblocking reads (O_NONBLOCK / O_NDELAY). Works just fine on NetBSD except
-now we no longer get EIO at the end when trying to read from the pty process
-that has exited. In fact, we're back to square one again. not ioctl(), not
-fcntl(), not select(), not even read() gets an i/o error after the pty
-process exits. But in NetBSD, we have to use nonblocking reads because ...
-Hmmmm, maybe switch the fd between blocking and nonblocking for the test...
-Nope, NetBSD seems to be hopeless (later, Ed Ravin confirmed that similar
-problems have been observed with other applications that try to do this).
-
-Switching to Linux, I see that yesterday's Solaris code (blocking reads)
-works exactly the same way on Linux.
-
-Tried today's O_NDELAY method on Solaris. It works perfectly. And then I
-moved this one to Linux and it works perfectly there too. Except in both
-cases we have the wierd thing with Zmodem at the end, but I think that's
-because rz/sz don't use standard i/o. On NetBSD, it still hangs at the end.
-
-Turns out that testing the pid works in NetBSD, even though it didn't in
-Solaris. Turns out read() gets an i/o error in Solaris and Linux but not
-in NetBSD. So checking the read result first, and then checking the pid
-if read() got zero bytes catches all three. 28 Dec 2006.
-
-Now the question of return code. In the original ttruncmd() function, we do
-a fork() and a wait(). When the external protocol program finishes, wait()
-gives us its return code and we can pass it on through \v(pexitstat) as well
-ttruncmd's own return code. But ttptycmd() has to interact with the pty
-continuously, so it can't just sit back and wait() for it. Instead we have
-to detect when the process has exited and then call waitpid() on the fork
-pid, before shutting down the pty. Tested on Solaris using Kermit as the
-external protocol and then inducing failure, or letting it run to
-completion. FAILURE and SUCCESS set appropriately in each case. Tested
-with Zmodem too, works OK except for the aforementioned cosmetic glitch at
-the end. Tested on NetBSD, all OK.
-
-To make K5 connection to Panix from Spam:
-
- set telnet debug on
- authenticate K5 init /realm:PANIX.COM /password:xxxxx
- set host shell.panix.com 23 /k5login
-
-Good... Now I try to send a file from Spam to Panix over the K5 connection
-using Kermit itself as the external protocol. It fails. Inspection of the
-debug log on the far side shows that the S-Packet was received correctly,
-good! This means we are reading the clear-text S-Packet from the external
-Kermit program, and that ttol() is encrypting appropriately.
-
-The remote Kermit sends the Ack and goes to read the next packet: ttinl()
-calls myfillbuf() and:
-
- SVORPOSIX myfillbuf calling read()
- SVORPOSIX myfillbuf=0 <-- read returns 0
- SVORPOSIX myfillbuf ttcarr=2
- SVORPOSIX myfillbuf errno=0 <-- and reports no error
- HEXDUMP: mygetbuf read (-3 bytes)
- mygetbuf errno=0
- ttinl myread failure, n=-3
- ttinl myread errno=0
- ttinl non-EINTR -3[closing]
-
-This happens because myfillbuf() deliberately returns -3 when read() gets 0
-bytes. I don't understand why this happens but the real problem is yet to
-come. The local Kermit (the one that has made the secure connection and is
-running the external protocol through ttptycmd()) eventually figures out
-that the transfer failed and when we reconnect, we get total garbage -- the
-encryption either stopped happening, or got out of sync.
-
-Looking at the local debug log, ttol() is doing its job, converting the
-initial "kermit -r\13" from plaintext to cyphertext, as shown by the
-hexdumps. Then it enters ttptycmd()... Hmmmm, wait, how can it send the
-"kermit -r" before it starts the external protocol? Never mind, worry about
-that later... Anyway, ttptycmd() says:
-
- ttptycmd loop top have_pty=1
- ttptycmd loop top have_net=1
- ttptycmd FD_SET ptyfd in
- ttptycmd FD_SET ttyfd in
- ttptycmd nfds=5
- ttptycmd select=1
- ttptycmd FD_ISSET ttyfd in
- ...
- ttptycmd in_chk(ttyfd) n=11
- ttptycmd ttxin n=11
-
-ttxin() asks for 11 bytes, myfillbuf() gets 11 bytes, and hexdump() shows
-the cyphertext, there doesn't seem to be any decrypting going on. Hmmm, it
-looks like the regular code calls ttinc() in a loop, rather than ttxin().
-Maybe ttxin() doesn't have decryption hooks. No, that's not it, the code is
-there, but the Kermit packet reader does not use ttxin(), it uses ttinl().
-But of course we can't use that for external protocols because it's designed
-only to read Kermit packets. Substituting a loop of ttinc()s for the ttxin()
-call fixes things (and stangely enough, it seems to be faster). And now we
-have our first external protocol transfer over a secure connection (external
-Kermit program, Linux over Kerberos 5 to NetBSD). Zmodem worked too for a
-short file but "something happens" with longer ones. 29 Dec 2006.
-
-New makefile target for Linux with Kerberos 5, linux+krb5, that doesn't
-include anything extra from SSL or other security methods (but apparently it
-is still necessary to include -DOPENSSL_097 in order to get the right names
-for the DES routines?). Ditto netbsd+krb5 for NetBSD, except in this case
--DOPENSSL_097 is not necessary. makefile, 30 Dec 2006.
-
-Note to myself: On Panix:
-
- export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/local/kerblib
- make netbsd+krb5 "K5LIB=-L/usr/local/kerblib" "K5INC=-I/usr/local/include"
-
-Can't telnet-k5 from newly built Kermit on NetBSD; partway through the
-negotiations, just after "TELNET RCVD SB ENCRYPTION SUPPORT DES_CFB64
-DES_OFB64 IAC SE" it dumps core. The last two lines in debug.log after
-this are:
-
- tn_sb[len]=5
- encrypt_support[cnt]=2
-
-Rebuilding with -DOPENSSL_097 doesn't change anything. Ed Ravin said they
-have two different Kerberos installations, Heimdahl and MIT; maybe some
-mixup between the two explains the problem (Jeff concurs). The core dump
-occurs in ck_crp: encrypt_support():
-
- debug(F100,"XXX ep not NULL","",0);
- type = ep->start ? (*ep->start)(DIR_ENCRYPT, 0) : 0; <-- Here
- debug(F101,"XXX new type","",type);
-
-Anyway, I can log in with Kerberos 5 to Panix OK from Columbia (sesame)
-using 8.0.201. So let's try to resurrect the Solaris version with everything:
-
- solaris9g+krb5+krb4+openssl+shadow+pam+zlib
-
-I hunted around to find where the current library and header file
-directories were... Last time I tried this (March 2006) it bombed, not
-finding libdes. Instead we have /opt/kerberos5125/lib/libdes425.a. Made a
-new cu-specific target that includes this; now we get farther; it blows up
-in ckcftp.c with tons of errors and warnings, which we can worry about
-later. Building again with -DNOFTP, it gets to ckuath.c (the first security
-module) and:
-
- ckuath.c:151:18: error: krb5.h: No such file or directory
- ckuath.c:152:21: error: profile.h: No such file or directory
- ckuath.c:153:21: error: com_err.h: No such file or directory
- ckuath.c:176:28: error: kerberosIV/krb.h: No such file or directory
- In file included from /opt/openssl-0.9.8d/include/openssl/des.h:101,
- from ckuath.c:219:
-
-Found krb5.h in /opt/kerberos5125/include/krb5.h, added a -I for this
-directory ... Now we get lots of warnings in ckuath.c, but it completes OK,
-then we wind up bombing out in ck_crp.c; I don't know why -- there are all
-the same warnings (related to argument passing to DES functions), but no
-errors. I have no clue.
-
-Tried to resurrect the solaris2x+krb4 target; this required changing -lkrb
-to -lkrb4 and -ldes to -ldes425. Lots of warnings in ckutio.c, ckcnet.c,
-ckctel.c, then it bombs out in ckcftp.c because it can't find krb.h. I
-found it, adjusted the -I flags, but now it bombs because krb.h itself
-#includes <kerberosIV/des.h>, which of course it can't find because the
-brackets mean it's looking in /usr/include/kerberosIV/, which, of course,
-the sys folks have removed. Giving up on Solaris again. Later, Jeff said
-"Solaris does not publicly export the krb5 libraries. You need to build
-the MIT Kerberos libraries separately and link to them." 30 December 2006.
-
-Changed copyright date to 2007. ckcmai.c, 1 Jan 2007.
-
-With Ed Ravin's help, successfully built C-Kermit with Kerberos 5 and
-OpenSSL (netbsd+krb5+openssl+zlib), but it does not make K5 connections; it
-gets hung up in the Telnet negotiations. 3 Jan 2007.
-
-Downloaded MIT Kerberos 5 v1.4.4 to Solaris 9, 54MB worth. This is just so
-I can build a Kerberized C-Kermit for testing ttyptycmd(). Ran the
-configure program, got a few warnings but it didn't fail (should it?) Did
-"make install", specifying a private directory but it failed immediately
-with "cannot stat libkrb5support.so.0.0: No such file or directory".
-OK, I tried. 3 Jan 2007.
-
-Made a new makefile target for Mac OS X, macosx10.4+krb5+ssl, ran it on Mac
-OS X 10.4.8. It bombs out in ckcftp.c with: ckcftp.c:551: error: static
-declaration of 'gss_mech_krb5' follows non-static declaration
-/usr/include/gssapi/gssapi_krb5.h:76: error: previous declaration of
-'gss_mech_krb5' was here". Ditto for gss_mech_krb5_old, gss_nt_krb5_name,
-and gss_nt_krb5_principal. Tried again with -DNOFTP. We get lots of
-warnings in the network modules, but they complete. But ck_ssl.c bombed
-with a conflict between its own declarations of encrypt_output and
-decrypt_input and the ones in ckuat2.h; removed the prototypes from the
-latter (as Jeff advised) it built OK and it works OK too. Built with FTP
-too, but with link-time warnings about the aformentioned gss_* symbols.
-#ifdef'd them out (gss_mech_krb5, gss_mech_krb5_old, gss_mech_name, and
-gss_mech_principal) for MACOSX, where these symbols are exported by the
-library. Now it all compiles and links OK, and runs OK too. 3 Jan 2007.
-
-Spent a day hunting around for a version of Zmodem that would build and
-execute on Mac OS X, finally found one. Now at last I could try a Zmodem
-external-protocol transfer over a secure connection. But phooey, C-Kermit's
-pty support didn't work on this box. Kermit finds master /dev/ptypa OK,
-then in ptyint_void_association() tries to open /dev/tty but gets ERRNO=6
-"device not configured" (which is apparently OK, because the same thing
-happens on other platforms where this works), then tries to open slave
-/dev/ttypa and gets ERRNO=13 "permission denied" because, indeed, I don't
-have r/w permission on the device. Left a message. 4 Jan 2007.
-
-Changed TRANSMIT /BINARY output buffer size from 252 to 508 to avoid
-TCP fragmentation. Need to add a SET command for this later.
-ckuus4.c, 5 Jan 2007.
-
-Found another Mac where the ptys weren't protected against me, make a K5
-connection and transferred a largish file with Zmodem with zero glitches,
-except it was kind of slow, 84K cps. Well, we're doing single-character
-reads on the net (ttinc()'s instead of ttxin()). Hmmm, but then I did it
-again and got 2.2Mcps. Success was reported, but it actually didn't work;
-it only sent the first quarter of the file.... Oh well, at least now we
-have a testbed. 5 Jan 2007.
-
-Tried again, saw that the file is actually transferred instantly but then
-we're not picking up the protocol at the end. Theory: after the transfer
-finishes, we come back to the prompt on the remote host, which means we have
-something to read from the net and write to the pty, but the pty has already
-exited. AFTER THE PTY IS GONE, WE DO NOT WANT TO READ FROM THE NET ANY
-MORE. Adding this test makes Kermit succeed right away when sending the
-same largish file, with a transfer rate of 4M cps, that's better. But the
-rz program on the far end is evidently not receiving the goodbye handshake
-from the receiver, because it sits there foreever in its *B09002402009418
-mode until I ^X^X^X^X^X out of it, at which point it deletes the file it
-already received, not very helpful. In the code, I read from the pty if the
-pty is open and there is room in the buffer. This means that when we get to
-the end, either there is no room in the buffer (unlikely) or the last bit
-sent by sz before exiting was cut off when the fork closed. Why do we get
-in this fix only with Zmodem and not with Kermit?
-
-In Mac OS X, after sz exits, we get ERRNO=5 if we try to write to the pty,
-but we still get no errors after that if we try to read from it. Still,
-prior to this we did more than 20 unproductive nonblocking reads from the
-pty (no error, no bytes) without incident; there did not seem to be anything
-waiting. In fact, the last thing we read from the pty were the text
-messages that are issued at the end of the transfer: "rz 3.73 1-30-03
-finished." After which it pauses a second and spits out a message about
-UNREGISTERED COPY.
-
-Figured out how to build lrzsz, in hopes that the previous problems were
-with rzsz and crzsz's fiddling with file descriptors, but I get the same
-behavior. Which is good, I guess, because if I can fix one, I fix them all.
-Or not... Testing lrz by itself (not under C-Kermit), I see that it doesn't
-work at all with Kermit's own Zmodem implementation.
-
-OK, here's one problem: at the end of the transfer, the Omen Zmodems print
-stuff like "Please read the license agreement", Kermit dutifully reads this
-from the pty and sends it to the host, the host shell says "Please: command
-not found", issues its prompt again, which Kermit reads, feeds to the pty,
-and apparently the pty echoes it, so we send it back to the host, and there
-ensues an infinite loop of getty babble until the pty closes. Now, there
-ought to be a way to make the external protocol shut up, like Kermit's
--q(uiet) flag, but these are unregistered versions so you can't shut up the
-messages. In fact, the transfer works, but the getty babble at the end
-ruins the experience. Now I'm beginning to wonder how any of these programs
-ever worked as external protocols. Hmmm, now that I try it, I see the
-same thing happens the old way, when using ttruncmd() rather than ttptycmd().
-
-Reading the crzsz documentation I see it says that messages come out on
-stderr. OK, that's progress. In ckupty.c I try redirecting 2 to /dev/null.
-Well good, this filters out the messages from csz, but we still get getty
-babble on the prompt. In the debug log, we read the last bunch of stuff
-from net, 618 bytes of Zmodem stuff... Now what happens?
-
-Zmodem on the remote exits, the host prints its prompt. Kermit, of course,
-reads the prompt from the net, now come to the bottom of the loop and we
-have 7 bytes to write to the pty, and no error condition, so we continue the
-loop. select() says that the pty is ready for writing. We write the 7
-bytes and and get no error. Loop again, this time select() says the pty has
-data waiting. Sure enough we get the prompt back, and send it to the net,
-and thus begins the getty babble. There are two causes for this:
-
- 1. crzsz does not exit immediately; it sleeps for 10 seconds after
- printing its nag message.
-
- 2. During this interval the pty seems to be echoing what is sent to it.
- csz is not echoing; I checked. Anyway, removing the pause doesn't
- seem to make a difference.
-
-ttptycmd() needs to:
-
- . TELL the pty module to redirect stderr to /dev/null
- . SET PTY TO NOECHO (master or slave?)
-
-Tried setting the pty to noecho:
-
- termbuf.c_lflag &= ~(ECHO|ECHOE|ECHOK);
-
-and this seemed to stop the getty babble. After the file transfer, I read
-back the prompt from the host shell, I write the prompt bytes to the pty;
-there is no error. And now select() simply hangs forever (or times out if
-a timeout is set). The question here is: why didn't writing to the pty
-produce an error? And, because we never detect the pty has exited, we can't
-set a good return code. 5 Jan 2007.
-
-Moved pty fork testing to a separate routine, pty_get_status(), and
-added a call to it from the place where we time out, in case the fork
-terminated; then we can get and return its status. 6 Jan 2007.
-
-Added calls to pty_get_status() to every place where we suspect a pty error,
-tried again with lrzsz, crzsz, and regular rzsz. All three work, but in
-each case waitpid() indicates that the sz program gave exit code 1 (failure).
-ckutio.c, 7 Jan 2007.
-
-Changing the subject... On my test system, every time I execute ttptycmd(),
-I get "permission denied" on /dev/ttyp3. Then I run it again and get to
-ttyp4 which is OK. I wanted to skip past any pty for which I lack
-permission and try the next without raising an error. Added debugging code:
-
- 16:25:23.524 pty_getpty() pty master open error[/dev/ptyp0]=5
- 16:25:23.524 pty_getpty() pty master open error[/dev/ptyp1]=5
- 16:25:23.524 pty_getpty() pty master open error[/dev/ptyp2]=5
- 16:25:23.524 pty_getpty() found pty master[/dev/ptyp3]
- 16:25:23.524 pty_getpty() slavebuf [2][/dev/ttyp3]
-
-So it already was skipping past open errors; ttyp3 was opened successfully.
-The problem is that ptyp3 is rw-rw-rw-, but the corresponding master,
-ttyp3, is rw--r----. It seems the code assumes that if the master can be
-opened, then so can the corresponding slave. Unfortunately, the code is
-not structured to allow us to skip ahead to the next master if the slave
-can't be opened. 7 Jan 2007.
-
-Spent a couple hours trying to rearrange the code in the pty module to skip
-past inaccessible slaves but it was a rabbit hole, not worth it, backed off.
-8 Jan 2008.
-
-Tried an upload over a secure connection using lsz. Unexpectedly, this time
-it worked; not only was the file (about 0.5MB) transferred correctly, but
-Kermit detected the fork's termination and got the pid's exit status, and,
-for the first time, correctly reported a successful transfer. I have no
-idea why this works today and not yesterday. More tests; it works most of
-the time. It works with csz and with regular sz too.
-
-(days later...)
-
-ckucns.c seems to do the right thing; it recognize the ZSTART string,
-activates the Zmodem-Receive APC, and returns. doconect() sees the APC and
-begins to execute it. The RECEIVE command results in a call to the GET
-command parser, doxget() (IS THAT RIGHT?), then comes a ttflui(), which
-throws away a bunch of stuff. Finally we get to ttptycmd(), we get a pty
-and run lrz in it, select() says stuff is waiting from the pty, but read
-returns 0, errno 0. Skipping the ttflui() in doxget() if the protocol was
-not Kermit didn't seem to make difference. ckuus6.c, 8 Jan 2007.
-
-The problem is that in this case, reads from the pty never get anything (no
-data, no error), write always gets an error. It's as if the pty was not
-being set up right, or we're using the wrong file descriptor. And if we
-skip the autodownload? Same thing.
-
-OK, putting downloads aside for a moment, let's get uploads working as well
-as possible. At this point we have the odd situation (at least in this
-configuration) that the upload succeeds, but now for some reason we are
-unable to read the exit status from the process, even though this was
-working before, so ttptycmd() returns 0 (failure), yet Kermit reports
-success.
-
-Well, it turns out that kill(pty_fork_pid,0) was gumming up the works.
-If we use only waitpid() all is well, I think. waitpid() with WNOHANG
-returns -1 with status -1 errno 0 if the pid has not exited, and it returns
-the pid and status > -1 if the process has exited. Fixed pty_get_status()
-to do it this way. ckutio.c, 7 Jan 2007.
-
-Let's move this from Mac OS to NetBSD and see how it works. Well, the file
-transfer was just fine, but then I used some sexps to calculate the elapsed
-time and transfer rate, and Kermit hung in dosexp(). Fine, ignoring that...
-The debug log shows that ttptycmd() gets the pty OK, master and slave, the
-i/o goes smoothly, and waitpid() does its job perfectly. Solaris, same
-deal; ttruncmd() goes smoothly, but then the sexps afterward get "Arithmetic
-exception". Turns out there was a BAD bug in dosexp() that allowed an
-integer division by 0 to occur under certain circumstances; it's always been
-there. Fixed in dosexp(): ckuus3.c, 8 Jan 2007.
-
-After noticing a few problems running the pop.ksc script in production over
-the past year, rewrote \femailaddress() to be more reliable and a lot
-simpler. ckuus4.c, 9 Jan 2007.
-
-Back to ttptycmd()... When we left off, we could send but not receive. Set
-up a test case using Kermit as the external protocol for receiving a short
-file. If I SET STREAMING OFF and use short packets, it actually does work,
-so it's not a complete failure to function, but apparently a lack of flow
-control for the pty. Began by completing the parameterization of the pty
-module, so it can be called for interactive use (fc 0) or for running
-protocols (1). Confirmed that everything works at least as well as before
-(e.g. "set host /pty emacs" vs external protocols). ckcdeb.h, ckutio.c,
-ckupty.c, 9 Jan 2007.
-
-Found in HP-UX "man 7 pty" a description of ioctl(fd,TIOCTTY,fc) which is
-exactly what we want: fc 0 turns off all termio processing and guarantees an
-ininterrupted, unmolested, flow-controlled stream of bytes in both
-directions. This function also exists in Linux, but not in Solaris, NetBSD,
-or Mac OS X (TIOCNOTTY is not what we want, it does something else entirely).
-
-Another possibility is TIOCREMOTE, which "causes input to the pseudoterminal
-to be flow controlled and not input edited, regardless of the terminal
-mode". This one exists in at least HPUX, NetBSD, Solaris, and Mac OS X.
-
-Solaris: builds OK, but at runtime we get ENOTTY ("Inappropriate ioctl for
-device"). By the time this happens, it's hard to tell from the code whether
-the fd we're using is for the master or the slave; TIOCREMOTE can be used
-only on the master. Close inspection shows that I am indeed doing that;
-ptyfd as seen by ttptycmd() is truly the master, i.e. the /dev/ptyXX device,
-not the /dev/ttyXX device (the slave fd can't be seen at all, as it exists
-only in a separate fork). OK, so now we know that TIOCREMOTE can't be used
-on Solaris.
-
-NetBSD: Somehow, whether as a result of today's fiddling or the phase of the
-moon, the code in pty_open_slave() that tries to open /dev/tty started
-failing on NetBSD ("Device not configured"). Changing it to be run only if
-fc == 0 (which doesn't seem to hurt anything), once again I get ENOTTY on
-the TIOCREMOTE ioctl. Zmodem works but Kermit totally fails (the fork exits
-immediately with an exit code of 0, even though it didn't do anything).
-
-Mac OS X: Exactly the same sequence and results as NetBSD.
-
-Linux: It did not execute the new ioctl at all; apparently the TIOC symbols
-are hidden or not exported or something.
-
-Where we stand:
- . Downloads don't work
- . Uploads got slow again
- . Kermit doesn't work at all as an external protocol
-
-Actually if I take the debugging out it goes fast, but it doesn't finish.
-
-All today's work on ttptycmd() looks like a dead end. To roll back to
-yesterday:
-
- cp ckutio.c-20070108 ckutio.c
- cp ckupty.c-20070108 ckupty.c
- cp ckupty.h-20070108 ckupty.h
-
-or to continue with today's:
-
- cp ckutio.c-20070109 ckutio.c
- cp ckupty.c-20070109 ckupty.c
- cp ckupty.h-20070109 ckupty.h
-
-Comparing Monday's and Tuesday's pty-related code, the differences are:
- 1. Passing of function code to and among pty modules.
- 2. Skipping the TIOCSCTTY ioctl and the open("/dev/tty") test.
- 3. Attempting to put pty in TIOCTTY or TIOCREMOTE mode.
-
-Commenting out 2 and 3 should put us back where we were on Monday if the
-parameterization was done right. And with this, on Solaris, downloading
-with Kermit external protocol works but slowly, 8K cps, with or without
-debugging. Debug log does not show any obvious bottlenecks; select() takes
-anywhere between no time at all and 0.1 seconds to return. If I increase
-the pty-net buffer size from 1K to 4K, the rate goes up to 55K cps. If I
-make it 8K I get 136K cps. With 16K I get 346K cps. 32K: 395K cps -- this
-last one isn't worth the doubling. But at 24K I get 490K cps, sometimes
-twice that. Let's stick with 24K for now. Downloading with Zmodem (rzsz)
-works at the same rate, but now we're back to seeing the getty babble
-(Several "**B0800000000022d") at the end. 10 Jan 2007.
-
-Moving to Mac OS X, everything works the same as on Solaris, except I don't
-get the Zmodem getty babble there, not even with Omen rzsz. Tested sends
-in both remote and local mode, the latter over a secure Kerberos 5 Telnet
-connection, using C-Kermit, rzsz, lrzsz, and crzsz, all good. 10 Jan 2007.
-
-Now we're back where we were yesterday morning, but with better throughput.
-The big issue then was receiving files. But yikes, now it works! Not only
-that, I got a transfer rate of 2.1M cps. That's using Kermit protocol,
-streaming, and big (4K) packets. Which didn't work before. Not a fluke
-either, I uploaded bigger and bigger files up to 6MB, they all went
-smoothly, at rates between 1 and 2 MBps. 10 Jan 2007.
-
-Not so great in Zmodem land, however. If I start the external-protocol
-receiver on the far end, escape back and start a Zmodem send... nothing.
-If I leave the remote C-Kermit at its prompt (where it supposed to recognize
-the Zmodem start string), still nothing. On the other hand, if I do it
-with a script instead of by hand:
-
- def xx output take blah\13, send /proto:zmodem \%1
-
-it works, at least intermittently. But that's in remote mode. We won't be
-using this in remote mode. In local mode, where we have a secure connection
-to another computer, it seems we can read from the pty and write to the net,
-but we time out waiting to read from the net; nothing arrives. Well, we
-know that i/o works both ways, so there is some kind of screwup with the
-Zmodem protocol start itself. Increasing the (still hardwired timeout) from
-5 to 22sec and driving the whole process with a script so as to avoid
-autodownload as well as manual dexterity effects... It just sits there
-forever, way longer than 22 sec. ^C'ing out, I see that sz was indeed
-started on the far end and the protocol was executing. But it looks like
-the receiver (the one running under ttptycmd()) is getting trashed packets,
-because (a) it seems to be sending the same thing over and over again, and
-(b) sometimes it waits as long as 10 seconds before anything arrives from
-the remote. Maybe I was too impatient; I interrupted it after 4 minutes but
-it seems to have been making some progress. Whenever there was data
-available to read from the net, it was always 65 bytes, and it was not
-actually the same data over and over. This is using lrz as the external
-protocol. crz gets a bit farther. In this case we read up to 24K at a
-gulp, but the amount varies a lot. It looks like we took in about 1.2MB of
-Zmodem protocol data, but were only able to output the first 20K of the
-file. Clearly there were lots of errors. In the end, the crz exits with
-status 1 (failure).
-
-Anyway it looks like we're back at needing to find a way to accomplish
-something like TIOCREMOTE on the pty, which is where we came in. 10 Jan 2007.
-
-Without any way to make the pty transparent and flow controlled, it would
-seem to make sense to write to the pty in smaller chunks than we do to the
-net. I left the read-from-pty-write-to-net buffer at 24K and changed the
-read-from-net-write-to-pty buffer to 48 bytes.
-
-Upload using lsz worked but took about 3 minutes. Actually it didn't work.
-On the local end it seemed to work, but the file did not appear on the
-remote end. Tried this several times, each time with different results,
-adding more debugging each time. The problem this time was that the pty
-read could get EWOULDBLOCK. Changed the code to not treat this as an error,
-now Zmodem uploads are solid again except I never got EWOULDBLOCK again
-either, even though I repeated the same upload about 1000 times (with
-throughput of over 2MBps even with debugging on), so the test for it has
-not been exercised.
-
-OK, uploads still work. Back to downloading... The very first pty read
-gets 0 bytes, followed by the fork test that shows that it exited with
-exit status 2.
-
-Next we try starting sz with some different options on the far end:
-
- -q: quiet (no messages):
- for some reason this gets totally stuck.
- it looks as if this option is misdocumented;
- sz seems to be sending the letter C (as in Xmodem 1K or whatever)
-
- -e: escape (all control chars):
- first attempt to read pty finds the process gone with exit status 2.
-
- -k: send 1k blocks:
- this one didn't stop immediately. It reads 48 bytes from net, writes
- 48 to the pty with no error. Then reads 21 bytes from the pty, writes
- them to the net OK. Then reads 48 bytes from net, writes them to pty OK,
- reads 21 from pty, writes to net OK, etc etc... It appears to have
- worked but (final read from pty returned 0, fork test showed lrz exited
- with status 0), but only 754 bytes were received from the net when the
- file is 420K...
-
-Well this only goes to show that the faster we shove stuff into the pty, the
-worse it gets. Zmodem downloads won't work unless we can make the pty
-transparent and flow-controlled. So to summarize today's developments:
-
- . separated in/out buffer sizes
- . handled EWOULDBLOCK
- . found out that sz options don't help much
-
-11 Jan 2007.
-
-Next day. This has got to be the most delicate code ever, it's like
-Whack-A-Mole, fix A and B pops up. Even without touching it, something that
-worked perfectly a 2:00 doesn't work at all an hour later. Maybe I could
-have used pipes instead of ptys, but pipes have problems of their own.
-There has to be a way to do this. The telnet server, the SSH server, etc --
-they all run on ptys, and we can upload files to them with Kermit. Why?
-Because Kermit puts its terminal into all the right modes using the
-time-honored methods of ttpkt() and ttvt(). Perhaps all we need is a copy
-of ttpkt() that operates on the pty.
-
-On that theory, let's go back to Kermit as the external protocol.
-It's important to suppress all messages and displays. With that,
-uploads work fine, no hitches.
-
-Downloads: We fail right away. The debug log shows the Kermit program that
-we are starting in the pty says:
-
- "" - Invalid command-line option, type "kermit -h" for help.
-
-But of course we are not giving it an invalid command-line option.
-Switching to gkermit for the external protocol, now we see that no matter
-command-line options we use, we read 0d 0d 0a from the pty and then the
-next time we go to read from the pty we get 0 bytes and waitpid() says the
-program has exited with status 1.
-
-Why should downloading be different from uploading? ttptycmd has no idea,
-it does everything the same. The only difference would seem to be which
-side sends first, but even that tends to get washed out by each program's
-startup messages.
-
-Downloading with Kermit worked 2 days ago, what's different now? The buffer
-sizes. Putting the net-to-pty back up to 24K (from 48 bytes)... Now it
-works again.
-
-Conclusion: Kermit conditions the pty correctly, Zmodem does not. Therefore
-ttruncmd() must duplicate what ttpkt() does.
-
-Or not. Because rz works fine on ssh/telnet ptys too. But not on our pty.
-lrz exits immediately with status code 2 = 01000 but there are no clues in
-the lrz.c source code, I don't even see this exit status set anywhere.
-Unredirecting stderr, I see that the error is "lrz: garbage on command line".
-
-Why do both Kermit and Zmodem sometimes think they are receiving an invalid
-command line? If I could capture the garbage...
-
-Side trip #1: ("pty.log",O_WRONLY) gives "no such file or directory".
-Changed this to ("pty.log",O_CREAT,0644) and now it doesn't get an error,
-and it creates the file, but not with 0644 permissions, and with nothing
-written in it. How come nothing works?
-
-Fine, the debug log shows that ttptycmd() receives the correct string
-(e.g. "lrz -v"). It passes it to do_pty() correctly, and do_pty() passes it
-to exec_cmd(), which runs cksplit() on it, coming up (in this case) with
-"lrz" and "-v", which is right, and then:
-
- args = q->a_head + 1;
- execvp(args[0],args);
-
-execvp() wants the args array to have a null element at the end. cksplit()
-does indeed do that, or at least the code is there. Added code to exec_cmd()
-to verify the argument list and that it is null-terminated. So far it is.
-
-Anyway, we have traffic between the Zmodem partners, but no joy.
-Commenting out the bit that redirects stderr, now I can see it on my screen
-in real time:
-
- lrz waiting to receive.Retry 0: Bad CRC
- Retry 0: Got ERROR
- Retry 0: TIMEOUT
- Retry 0: TIMEOUT
- Retry 0: TIMEOUT
- Retry 0: TIMEOUT
-
-etc etc, forever. Trying sz -e on the far end, I get:
-
- Retry 0: Bad CRC
- Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
- Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
- Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
- Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
- Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
- Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
- Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
- ...
- Retry 0: Got ERROR
- Retry 0: Bad CRC
- Retry 0: Got ERROR
- Retry 0: Got ERROR
- lrz: xxufio.c removed.
-
-So apparently it's not a matter of escaping. Trying some other stuff, I
-caught the command-line problem in the act:
-
- lrz: garbage on commandline
- Try `lrz --help' for more information.
-
-Debug log shows:
-
- cksplit result[lrz]=1
- cksplit result[-v]=2
- exec_cmd arg[lrz]=0
- exec_cmd arg[-v]=1
- exec_cmd arg[]=2
-
-An empty string at the end instead of a null pointer. I really do not see
-any way that could happen, but rather than dig into cksplit() again after
-all these years I added a test for this in exec_cmd(), which, of course
-after adding it, never encountered this behavior again.
-
-Fiddled with pty buffer size again. Made it 512 bytes instead of 24K.
-Zmodem downloads are the same (Rety 0: TIMEOUT, over and over). But I don't
-see what the problem is -- every time we receive n bytes from the net, we
-write n bytes successfully to the pty and there are no errors. But it also
-looks like the remote sender is sending the file header over and over
-because it's not receiving an acknowledgment. If we're not losing data,
-then maybe it's a transparency problem.
-
-Tried uncommenting the TIOCblah stuff I commented out before. Now instead
-of only timeouts I get:
-
- lrz waiting to receive.Retry 0: Bad CRC
- Retry 0: Got ERROR
- Retry 0: Bad CRC
- Retry 0: Got ERROR
- Retry 0: Bad CRC
- Retry 0: Got ERROR
- Retry 0: TIMEOUT
-
-which is odd because the TIOCREMOTE ioctl failed with errno 14, EFAULT,
-bad address, which should indicate it had no effect. We're still receiving
-data from the remote in tiny chunks (from 12 to 65 bytes), apparently the
-same stuff (file header), and writing them to the pty successfully but
-nothing...
-
-Looked at cloning ttpkt() for the pty, but these stupid routines use global
-tty mode structs so it's not going to be easy.
-
-Well, we got exactly nowhere today, but I think I'll leave stderr as it is
-so users will see some feedback; no reason not to.
-
-WHY DO KERMIT DOWNLOADS WORK AND ZMODEM NOT?
-
-Is it 8-bit transparency? Up til now I've been testing with text files.
-If I try to download a binary what happens? Fails after 99 seconds. Packet
-log from the far end shows that as soon as the first packet containing 8-bit
-data is sent, everything stops. At least I got one of these:
-
- 17:23:56.475 exec_cmd arg[gkermit]=0
- 17:23:56.475 exec_cmd arg[-qr]=1
- 17:23:56.475 exec_cmd arg[]=2
- 17:23:56.475 exec_cmd SUBSTITUTING NULL=2 <-- the code I just added
-
-Doing this again shows the same thing on the near end. All the 7-bit-only
-packets are sent and acknowledged OK. Three 8-bit data packets arrive and
-nothing else happens after that. This is with G-Kermit.
-
-The same thing happens with C-Kermit receiving. But if I change C-Kermit's
-.kermrc to turn off streaming and use a short packet length:
-
-The transfer works, even though it's sending 8-bit bytes. So the problem is
-not 8-bit data after all, per se. Facts:
-
- . Kermit can receive streaming transfers of 7-bit files.
- . Kermit can not receive streaming transfers of 8-bit files.
- . Kermit can receive nonstreaming transfers of 8-bit files with short packets.
- . Kermit can receive nonstreaming transfers of 8-bit files with 1K packets.
- . Kermit can receive nonstreaming transfers of 8-bit files with 4K packets.
-
-So it's the combination of streaming and 8-bit data? 12 Jan 2007.
-
-As a test I made a new routine pty_make_raw() that does cfmakeraw() (a
-nonportable "POSIX-like" function known to be used on ptys in applications
-that do approximately what we're attempting). Results:
-
- Solaris: errno 25 - inappropriate ioctl for device.
-
-This happens even when we try to get the terminal modes with tcgetattr(),
-which is completely nuts. We pass it the file descriptor of the pty master,
-which is supposed to work. But in Mac OS X, there are no errors. But
-downloads still don't work; lots of errors but the pattern is different.
-Using a very small buffer:
-
- Retry 0: Bad CRC
- Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
- Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
- Retry 0: Got TIMEOUT
- Retry 0: TIMEOUT
- Retry 0: Bad CRC
- Retry 0: Bad CRC
- Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
- Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
- Retry 0: TIMEOUT
- Retry 0: Got ERROR
- Retry 0: TIMEOUT
- Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
- Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
- Retry 0: Bad CRC
-
-Using a bigger buffer:
-
- Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
- Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
- Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
- Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
- Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
- Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
- (several screensful)
-
-Various other combinations... Nothing seems to work.
-
-Insight: telnetd does exactly what we want to do, sort of.
-But it uses TIOCPKT, so every time it reads from pty, it receives
-one control byte and then the data bytes, which would complicate our
-buffering scheme considerably. Anyway the TIOCPKT ioctl() fails on
-Mac OS X with 14 "Bad address".
-
-Also see: snoopserver.c (found in Google). It seems to do things in a
-slightly different way -- it sets stdout to raw and then dups it to the
-slave side of the pty?
-
-Maybe it's a mistake to use the ckupty.c routines. They are designed for
-creating and accessing an interactive session. Maybe just copy one of the
-other programs.
-
-18 Jan 2007. Tried going back to blocking rather than nonblocking reads
-to see if it would make a difference, after all the other changes. Nope.
-OK, let's look at some of these other programs...
-
-snoopserver.c. I don't know exactly what this is or where it's from or what
-platform it runs on and there are no comments to speak of, but it does
-approximately what ttptycmd() does. To get a pty it uses openpty():
-
- if (openpty(&pty, &tty, NULL, NULL, NULL) == -1)
-
-then creates a fork. In the fork, it closes the pty (master) and
-manipulates the modes of the tty (slave), dups tty to be stdio, and then
-doex execv() on the command. Meanwhile the upper fork closes the tty
-(slave), gets the attributes of stdin, using atexit() to have them
-automatically restored on exit. Then it sets stdin to raw mode and enters
-the select() loop on stdin, the pty master, and the net. It uses regular
-blocking reads. It does not use TIOCPKT or anything like it.
-
-openpty() is supported on: Linux, Mac OS X, NetBSD, FreeBSD, ...
-openpty() is NOT supported on: Solaris, HP-UX, ...
-
- 1. Try copying the pty code, but keep everything else the same.
-
-I did this; it compiles and starts OK, upper fork (ttptycmd) debug log shows
-no errors, but nothing happens. Logs show that the Kermit program that is
-started in the subfork seems to die as soon as it reaches eof on its init
-file. The good news, at least, is that select() doesn't report report that
-the pty is ready to be read. Clearly the file descriptors aren't being
-assigned as expected, or as before.
-
-In ckupty.c getptyslave() dup2's the slave fd to 0 and 1. The new code
-does exactly the same thing. Debug log makes it look like the forked kermit
-is not receiving its command line. But now I'm not even sure that the
-forked kermit started at all. ps from another terminal doesn't show it.
-
-19 Jan 2007: Noticed that in snoopserver, the select() calls use standard
-input and output file descriptors, rather than the pty master. Made that
-change... In doing that I had to look at every file descriptor in every
-line of code and discovered a couple mistakes, fixed them, put back the
-original code but with the fixes, tried it, but no change; can upload OK but
-still can't download with Zmodem without lots of errors and ultimate
-failure. Going back to the alternative version and trying to get the the
-file descriptors sorted out, now it appears that the external Kermit program
-never even starts in the lower fork. After a bit more fiddling I sort that
-out, but now when the lower Kermit program goes to open "/dev/tty" it gets
-errno 6 "Device not configured". Forcing it to use stdio with "-l 0", it
-gets past this and actually sends its first packet. But the Kermit on top
-reads nothing from the pty.
-
-Next, I change the pty fd from STDIN_FILENO and STDOUT_FILENO to slavefd.
-No difference. Next I comment out the dup2() calls. This time I get some
-action. The transfer starts, but only one packet comes. Log shows that
-the lower Kermit sends its S packet. The upper Kermit receives the ACK
-but the lower Kermit never gets it. The write to the pty succeeds, no
-error. Different combinations give different results. If write to master
-and read from the slave, I get packets in both directions but tons of
-errors.... This happens only if I comment out the dup2()'s.
-
-25 Jan 2007: After leaving it sit for a while, and realizing that what I'm
-trying to do has to be possible because so much other software does the same
-thing (e.g. Telnet servers), I put things back to how they were originally
--- the upper fork (Kermit) uses the master and the lower fork the slave.
-The upper fork puts the master in raw mode, the lower fork puts the slave in
-raw mode. The lower fork dup2's the slave fd to stdin/out. Send file in
-remote mode using external Kermit: works OK but select() times out at the
-end. This means that the self-contained pty code in ttptycmd() is sorted
-out -- all the file descriptors go to the right place, etc, and now we can
-use this routine as a testbed, rather than the original ckupty.c-based one.
-
-But send with lsz, csz, and regular rz: Nothing happens, times out after 0
-bytes of i/o. Once again, Kermit works, Zmodem doesn't. The reason for
-running Zmodem in a pty is so its i/o will work as it does on a terminal,
-no matter how it may fiddle the file descriptors. So why don't we see a
-single byte come out?
-
-Commenting out pty_make_raw(), I get a successful Zmodem send using lsz.
-csz manages to get the filename across, but then gets stuck. regular sz, on
-the other hand, works perfectly. Testing csz by itself (not under Kermit),
-I see it fails in exactly the same way ("Got phony ZEOF", etc). OK, forget
-crzsz.
-
-OK, let's move to local mode over a Kerberized Telnet connection...
-Uploading (sending) with external Kermit protocol... works.
-Downloading (receiving) with external Kermit protocol... works.
-Uploading with sz... works.
-Downloading with lrz... Gets tons of errors and fails.
-
-Running pty_make_raw() on the slave but not on the master: no difference.
-Running pty_make_raw() on the master but not on the slave: no difference.
-
-Back where we started... Either:
-
- . Zmodem is overdriving the pty, no matter what modes we put it in.
- . It's a transparency problem.
-
-Theoretically we should be able to test these by using different sz switches:
- -q: quiet (should always use this)
- -e: escape all control characters
- -B n: Buffer n bytes (rather than whole file)
- -L n: Packet length
- -l n: Frame length (>= packet length)
- -w n: Window size
- -4: 4K blocksize (doesn't help)
-
--q by itself doesn't help.
--q -e, this one worked but still got about 100 errors and was very slow.
--q -e -l 200 -L 100, failed fast and bad.
--q -e -w 1. Failed quickly.
--q -e -w 1 -B 100. Eventually failed.
--q -w 1, Eventually failed.
--q -l 1024, this gets much more errors, definitely need -e.
--q -e -l 1024, got pretty far before failing.
--q -e -w 1 -l 1024, also got pretty far before failing.
--q -e, this one got farthest of all, about 48K, before getting errors.
-
-In the latter combinations that work somewhat better, we always get up to
-16K, or 32K, or 48K, before the errors start coming out and piling up.
-Sometimes the errors are recoverable and we receive as much as 300K
-successfully before giving up.
-
-Now that we have data flowing pretty well (but not well enough), tried
-reinstating pty_make_raw(), but it hurt more than helped.
-
-As a sanity check, I tried transferring from the same host over the same
-kind of connection (Kerberized Telnet) directly to K95's built-in Zmodem
-protocol, and that worked fine. So the problem is definitely in the pty.
-Or more precisely, where Kermit writes incoming net data to the pty master.
-
-26 Jan 2007: Tried changing the size of the net-to-pty buffer from 24K to
-1K. Result: total failure. Set both buffers to 1K. Still total failure.
-Set both to 4K: now we get about 45K of data, then failure. Put them both
-back to 24K, still fails totally -- the same code that worked pretty well
-yesterday. Actually, no downloads work, not even Kermit, not even of
-text files.
-
-27 Jan 2007: Since I have not been able to find a way to make ptys work for
-this, I made a third copy of this routine, this time using pipes instead of
-ptys. The disadvantage here is that if the external protocol does not use
-stdio, the pipes won't work, but one thing a time...
-
-Inferior Kermit starts in lower fork, but when it tries to send its first
-packet it gets errno=9 EBADF, Bad File Descriptor. Substituting G-Kermit as
-the external protocol, which is simpler, reveals that the problem is that
-the external protocol gets errors when it tries to manipulate the its stdio
-file descriptors with ioctls, etc; these are not valid for a pipe. The pipe
-mechanism itself works. If I take out the test for ttpkt() failing in
-gkermit, the file transfer works OK. Trying Zmodem... Sending works OK;
-receiving works a lot better than with ptys (it got 360K into the file
-before failing). Making the buffers smaller, doesn't help.
-
-I'm starting to wonder if the problem might be in my buffering code, rather
-than in the pty or pipe interface... Try making a version that does
-single-character reads and writes.
-
-This one reads the first packet from the lower Kermit and sends it. It is
-recognized by the other Kermit, which sends an ACK. We see the ^A of the
-ACK, but then select() times out on the next character -- OF COURSE: because
-at a lower level, it has already been read. We have to check the myread
-buffer, and then call select() only if it's empty. Making this change:
-
- . SEND with G-Kermit works (but very slowly).
- . SEND with lsz works but gets a lot of errors, eventually succeeds.
-
-Let's work our way back... With the same changes to the buffered pipe version:
-
- . SEND with G-Kermit/streaming works (fast).
- . SEND with lsz works too (fast), but we get gubbish at the end.
- . RECEIVE with Kermit fails because "/dev/tty is not a terminal device".
- . RECEIVE with rsz... lots of errors ("garbage count exceeded") but succeeded.
-
-But maybe now we're seeing pipe artifacts, so going back one more step to
-the version that gets its own pty and starts its own fork:
-
- . SEND with G-Kermit/Streaming works (fast) but select() times out at the end.
-
-Another breakthrough: Moved the write pieces to below the read pieces. This
-is what was preventing the buffer reset code from working -- with the writes
-done before the reads, we never catch up and can never reset the buffers.
-
- . SEND with G-Kermit/streaming works (fast) (but there's a pause at the end)
- . SEND with lsz works (fast) (but there's a pause at the end)
- . RECEIVE with rsz... lots of errors ("garbage count exceeded") and fails.
- . RECEIVE with Kermit -- nothing happens (it thinks it succeeded), then we
- reconnect, terminal sees S packet and goes into autodownload
-
-From the log it looks like ttpkt() fails in the lower Kermit. Switching
-this with the hacked G-Kermit... it gets "transmission error on reliable
-link". Tried again with real Kermit below, this time with "-l 0" and not
-streaming. This was actually working, but slowly, I don't see any NAKs in
-the packet log, but then select() timed out.
-
-28 Jan 2007: Restored both the calls to pty_make_raw():
-
- . SEND with C-Kermit streaming works, but slow (54Kcps)
- . Ditto, but with debugging off -- hangs forever.
- . Ditto, but using G-Kermit instead of C-Kermit -- also hangs forever.
-
-Backed off on calling pty_make_raw(). Same thing.
-Reduced size of net-to-pty buffer. Same thing.
-
-15 Feb 2007... Decided to give up on this and publish it as is, in hopes
-that somebody with more experience with ptys can make it work, because I'm
-just going in circles. So today I just have to get the code into shape so
-people could choose among the three alternative routines. The second one,
-yttyptycmd(), is the one that uses openpty(), which is not portable, so it
-can be enabled only for Mac OS X, NetBSD, FreeBSD, and Linux, or by also
-defining HAVE_OPENTPY at compile time. Anyway, if you build Kermit in the
-normal way, you get the regular behavior -- ttruncmd() is used to execute
-external protocols. If you build it with -DXTTPTYCMD, you get the first
-version of ttptycmd(); with -DYTTPTYCMD the second, and with -DZTTPTYCMD the
-third.
-
-(Then some interruptions, then...)
-
-From Jeff, fix hostname comparison in X.509 certificate checking to work
-right in the case of names that contain no periods. dNSName_cmp(): cl_ssl.c,
-21 Feb 2007.
-
-John Dunlap noticed some strange behavior when transferring files between
-home base and the EM-APEX oceanographic floats via satellite... long story,
-but every so often the transfer would get stuck for a long time, and it
-happened only when C-Kermit was sending a file and received two or more
-packets (Ack or Nak) back to back from the float. Years ago I added some
-lookahead code to ttinl() to clear the input buffer of any interpacket junk
-so that, in the windowing case, we wouldn't be tricked next time around into
-thinking a packet was waiting to be read when there wasn't. The code, which
-has been there for a while, was a bit fractured; luckily, it would be
-executed only when the debug log was active so it didn't have much effect.
-The problem was that if the SOP came immediately after the EOP, it could be
-missed because the loop read the next character before checking the current
-one. Fixed by rearranging the loop. Also I changed it so it would execute
-in all cases, not only when the debug log was active. Also, cleaned up a
-bunch of confusing #ifdefs and removed some chunks that had been commented
-out for years, decades maybe. ttinl(): ckutio.c, 21-22 Feb 2007.
-
-Added NOW keyword info to HELP DATE, plus a tip about how to convert to UTC;
-suggested by Arthur Marsh. ckuus2.c, 22 Feb 2007.
-
-When an FTP client sends NLST to the server and no matching files are found,
-the server is supposed to respond with an error message on the control
-channel and nothing on the data channel. However it seems that at least one
-server sends the error message back on the data channel, as if it were a
-filename ("/bin/ls: blah: No such file or directory"), and on the control
-channel there is no error indication ("226 ASCII Transfer complete"). At
-this point remote_files() has a listfile and, if a match pattern was given,
-it looks through list to see if any of the lines match the given filename,
-e.g. "blah". This makes FTP CHECK give false positives. The problem
-(diagnosed by Jeff) is that the match pattern was not given in this case, so
-it takes some random default action, resulting in the spurious success
-return. Fixed by using the user's string as the pattern. Not tested,
-however, since I don't have access to a server that behaves this way.
-ckcftp.c, 22 Feb 2007.
-
-If an external-protocol file transfer fails, don't print Kermit-specific
-hints. ckuus5.c, 22 Feb 2007.
-
-One more time with ttinl(). Got rid of the "csave" junk, which never could
-have worked (which is no doubt why it was in a debugging section). The
-problem was that saving the beginning of the next packet locally did not
-synchronize with the buffer clearing (ttflui()) done at a higher level,
-between calls to ttinl(). So now, the lookahead code, if it finds the
-beginning an as-yet unread packet, puts it back at the head of the input
-queue. This way, if the protocol engine clears the input buffer, it will
-get the whole packet, not just the part after the SOH. ckutio.c, 24 Feb 2007.
-
-From Steven M Schweda, Saint Paul, MN: adaptation of large file support to
-VMS (it was already possible to transfer large files in VMS C-Kermit but the
-file-transfer display and statistics were wrong). And a minimal adaptation
-of the FTP client to VMS -- no RMS, no special VMS file stuff, Stream_LF and
-binary files only, developed and tested only with UCX. SSL/TLS is
-supported. The source-code changes are minimal; most have nothing to do
-with VMS, but with header files, prototypes, and data types (e.g. ftp_port
-int rather than short, various signed/unsigned conflicts) to shut up
-compiler warnings. Some of these could be dangerous in terms of
-portability; I've marked them with /* SMS 2007/02/15 */. ckcfns.c,
-ckcnet.h, ck_ssl.h, ckuus3.c, ckuus4.c, ckvfio.c, ckcftp.c, ckvker.mms
-(which was rewritten to actually reflect the source module dependencies),
-ckvker.com (also heavily modified). ckvker.com (the "makefile" for VMS
-C-Kermit) now indludes "F" and "I" option flags for the large File and
-Internal ftp features, plus better handling of Vax/Alpha/IA64 distinction.
-26 Feb 2007.
-
-Changed NetBSD targets to include -DHAVE_OPENPTY and -lutil, so they
-can use openpty(). makefile, 26 Feb 2007.
-
-Built on Solaris without and with SSL OK.
-Built on NetBSD with Kerberos 5, OK.
-Built on Mac OS X 10.4, regular version, OK.
-Built on Mac OS X 10.4 with SSL and Kerberos 5, OK.
-
-On VMS 7.2-1/Alpha with MultiNet 4.4A-X...
-
-'CC' 'CCOPT' KSP:ckuus3
-%DCL-W-TKNOVF, command element is too long - shorten
- \CKUUS4.OBJ "'CC' 'CCOPT' KSP:ckuus4" "KSP:ckuus4.c KSP:ckcsym.h KSP:ckcdeb.h
- KSP:ckclib.h" "KSP:ckcasc.h KSP:ckcker.h KSP:ckcnet.h KSP:ckvioc.h"
-"KSP:ckctel.h KSP:ckuusr.h KSP:ckucmd.h KSP:ckuver.h" "KSP:ckcxla.h
- KSP:ckuxla.h KSP:ckcuni.h KSP:ckuath.h"
-
-The new rule for ckuus4.c was too long. I removed one file from the
-dependency list (ckcxla.h, which will probably never change again) and that
-made it OK. Built Nonet and Net versions OK, but this is without the new
-stuff.
-
-"make f" (large-file support) on VMS 7.2-1...
-'CC' 'CCOPT' KSP:ckuus4
- if (CKFSEEK(fp,(CK_OFF_T)j,SEEK_CUR) != 0) {
-........................^
-%CC-I-IMPLICITFUNC, In this statement, the identifier "fseeko" is implicitly
-declared as a function.
-
-Ditto for ftello and fseeko in various other places, and then fseeko and
-ftello come up up undefined at link time.
-
-The rule for ckcftp in "make i" (Internal FTP support) had the same problem.
-I removed ckcxla.h from its dependency list too, but "utime" comes up
-undeclared at compile time and undefined at link time.
-
-Verdict: neither one of the two new features can be used in VMS 7.2 or
-earlier, but the code still builds OK if you don't ask for them.
-
-VMS 8.3 on IA64... Can't build anything:
-%MMS-F-BADTARG, Specified target (WERMIT) does not exist in description file
-
-27 Feb 2007: Changed CKVKER.COM to keep all its dependencies but use a
-shorter logical name (Steven M Schweda). The problem on VMS 8.3 is that MMS
-now supports case-sensitive file systems, and so it can't find anything.
-Workaround: bypass MMS (include "m" in P1). With this, "@ckvker.com ifm"
-builds OK on HP Testdrive, but I can't test the new features since outbound
-connections are not allowed there. As for fseeko(), ftello(), and utime(),
-they simply are not availble prior to VMS 7.3. It would probably be a good
-idea to test for this in CKVKER.COM, but actually it is possible to install
-newer C's and CRTLs on older VMS versions, so don't stand in their way.
-
-28 Feb 2007: With additional chages from SMS, and then some further
-adjustments, I was able to build the FTP version on VMS 7.2-1. First I
-tested it with GET of a binary file, but it transferred it in text mode.
-After a few more attempts with PUT and GET, it crashed with "floating/decimal
-divide by zero" in ckscreen, ckuusx.c line 27859. Of course, that's the
-listing line, not the source line, and I don't have a listing.
-
-To get a listing, I deleted CKUUSX.OBJ and then did:
-
- $ make i "" "" "/LIST"
-
-Surprisingly, it recompiled everything.
-
-Anyway, the divide by zero happened in a section of code where the divisor
-was not checked, but it was a section of code we should not have been
-executing at all, since the file-transfer display was fullscreen, and this
-was in the "brief" section. Anyway, I added the needed check. Again, it
-recompiles everything. Maybe there's no MMS on grumpy -- right, there isn't.
-
-ANYWAY... Try to GET a binary file like this:
-
- binary
- ---> TYPE I
- 200 Type set to I.
- get gkermit
- ---> TYPE A
- 200 Type set to A.
- ---> SIZE gkermit
- 550 gkermit: file too large for SIZE.
- GET gkermit (text) (-1 bytes)---> TYPE A
-
-Anyway... "get /binary gkermit" downloads it, seemingly correctly (the byte
-count is right).
-
-But "put /binary gkermit.;1" results in a 0-length GKERMIT file being sent.
-Here's the debug log:
-
-FTP PUT gnfile[DISK$MSA4:[C.FDC.NET]gkermit.;1]=1
-ftp putfile flg[DISK$MSA4:[C.FDC.NET]gkermit.;1]=0
-zltor fncnv[DISK$MSA4:[C.FDC.NET]gkermit.;1]=-1
-FTP PUT nzltor[GKERMIT]
-zfnqfp 1[DISK$MSA4:[C.FDC.NET]gkermit.;1]=675
-zfnqfp 2[DISK$MSA4:[C.FDC.NET]GKERMIT.;1]=31
-zfnqfp 3[DISK$MSA4:[C.FDC.NET]GKERMIT.;1]=31
-zrelnam result 2[gkermit.;1]
-ftp sendrequest restart[DISK$MSA4:[C.FDC.NET]gkermit.;1]=0
-openi name[DISK$MSA4:[C.FDC.NET]gkermit.;1]
-openi sndsrc=-1
-openi file number=2
-zopeni[DISK$MSA4:[C.FDC.NET]gkermit.;1]=2
-zopeni fp=0
-chkfn=2
-chkfn return=0
-zopeni fixed file format - using blk I/O
-zopeni binary flag at open=1
-zopeni ifile_bmode=1
-zopeni binary=1
-zopeni RMS operations completed ok
-openi zopeni 1[DISK$MSA4:[C.FDC.NET]gkermit.;1]=1
-ftpcmd cmd[PASV]
-FTP SENT [PASV]
-FTP RCVD [227 Entering Passive Mode (166,84,1,2,233,216)]
-initconn connect ok
-FTP SENT [STOR GKERMIT]
-FTP RCVD [150 Opening BINARY mode data connection for 'GKERMIT'.]
-doftpsend2 ftpcode[STOR]=150
-
- Here is where the file is supposed to be read and sent but there is nothing
- in the log between the "doftpsend2 ftpcode" line and the following line.
-
-rftimer status=1
-gftimer status 1=1
-gftimer status 2=1409025
-gftimer status 3=1409025
-gftimer s[0.000000]
-zclose n=2
-chkfn=2
-chkfn return=1
-zclose ZIFILE RMS operations completed ok
-ftp getreply lcs=0
-ftp getreply rcs=-1
-ftp getreply fc=0
-FTP RCVD [226 Transfer complete.]
-ftp getreply[226 Transfer complete.]=2
-doftpsend2 ok=0
-
-Everything is OK up until we go to send the file, then it behaves as if we
-got EOF immediately and so closes the data connection, and reports success;
-an empty copy of the file is left on the far end.
-
-Starting over with a text file.... PUT LOGIN.COM gets another divide by
-zero. But it happened in the code I just fixed, which is impossible. Swell.
-I recompiled everything and this time the upload worked, and downloading it
-again worked too.
-
-But a binary file still can't be uploaded. Trying to upload a text file
-after doing this seems to succeed (reports the right number of bytes sent)
-but nothing appears on the far side.
-
-SUMMARY:
-
- To download a text file: GET /ASCII blah.txt (/ASCII is optional)
- To download a binary file: GET /BINARY blah.bin (/BINARY is required)
- To upload a text file: PUT blah.txt (/ASCII switch not needed)
- To upload a binary file: PUT /BINARY blah.bin (doesn't work)
-
-Problems:
- . Why doesn't BINARY "stick"?
- . Why don't binary uploads work?
-
-The culprit seems to be the VMS version of zxin(). In the FTP module,
-zxin() is called only when sending binary files. In VMS, zxin() is just
-a front end for C-Library fread(). It probably needs to do just do
-zminchar() in a loop, like binary mode does, but calling zzout instead
-of xxout. Or something like that. FINISH THIS TOMORROW (debug on grumpy).
-
-2 Mar 2007: New logs from John Dunlap.
-
-ema-1636-log-0175.dbg: C-Kermit uploads a short file. It receives an Ack for
-the Z packet it just sent, tailgated by the beginning of a Nak for the next
-packet. When the second SOH is encountered, it is put back in the myread
-queue. Then the protocol engine, to which we return the Ack, says, "I have
-the packet I wanted so I'm clearing the buffer", and away go the first two
-bytes of the Nak from the myread buffer. Then, having just received the Ack
-of our Z packet, we send our B, and go to read the reply. in_chk finds 0 in
-the myread buffer (which we just cleared) and 6 waiting to be read from the
-comms channel, which it does, obtaining the remaining 6 bytes of the Nak,
-which it properly discards. (The reason this is proper is that, having
-already received the Ack for the last packet it sent, no Ack or Nak that
-arrives subsequently -- in the non-windowing case -- could possibly affect
-what it does next.) Since it hasn't yet found a good packet, it keeps
-reading, and now it finds the Ack to the B, as soon as it showed up. This
-is how it's supposed to work. No time was lost because of anything that
-C-Kermit did.
-
-ema-1636-log-0174.dbg: C-Kermit uploads a short file. It sends Data packet
-#3 and receives the Ack followed immediately by the first 3 bytes of a Nak
-for packet 4. When it gets to the SOH of the second packet, it pushes it
-back in the queue. Again, input() flushes the input buffer (myread queue
-and device buffer). C-Kermit detects EOF on the file it is sending, and
-sends the Z packet. Then it reads the remaining bytes of the Nak,
-which it discards, and then it finds the Ack for Z which comes in 23 seconds
-later, sends the B, gets a Nak for the B, sends the B again, gets the Ack
-for the B 4 seconds later, and done. Again, it's working right and losing
-no time.
-
-The question remains: what would happen if the protocol engine did not clear
-the buffer? Would ttinl() retrieve all packets in sequence even when they
-come back to back? To test this, I had C-Kermit send a file using 30 window
-slots and observed the stream of Acks in the reverse direction:
-
- HEXDUMP: mygetbuf read (16 bytes)
- 01 25 23 59 2f 52 39 0d | 01 25 24 59 2b 26 31 0d .%#Y/R9. .%$Y+&1.
- ttinl lookahead my_count=9
- ttinl lookahead removed=^M
- ttinl lookahead pushback SOP=^A
- HEXDUMP: ttinl got (7 bytes)
- 01 25 23 59 2f 52 39 | .%#Y/R9
- RECEIVE BUFFERS:
- buffer inuse address length data type seq flag retries
- 0 1 29212 9667 0 Y 3 0
- [\ 1%#Y]
- ...
- in_chk my_count=8
- ...
- ttinl lookahead my_count=1
- ttinl lookahead removed=^M
- HEXDUMP: ttinl got (7 bytes)
- 01 25 24 59 2b 26 31 | .%$Y+&1
- RECEIVE BUFFERS:
- buffer inuse address length data type seq flag retries
- 0 1 29212 9667 0 Y 4 0
- [\ 1%$Y]
-
-Here we can see that the pushed-back SOH was properly retrieved next time
-around, and the tailgating Ack was not lost. This scenario repeats itself
-212 times in the log, and there are no screwups.
-
-Back to VMS FTP... The problem with sending binary files is that zxin()
-uses C-Library fopen()/fread() instead of RMS, so it can't access the input
-file, which was opened by zopeni(), which is totally RMS-ified in VMS
-C-Kermit. For VMS only, I replaced the zxin() loop by a zminchar() loop
-like the one used in text mode, except without the character set or
-record-format conversion. Tested by PUT /BINARY of some binary files, which
-worked fine. ckcftp.c, 2 Mar 2007.
-
-Next problem... VMS C-Kermit ftp client sending binary files in text mode.
-Variation 1: We just send the file. zopeni() is supposed to detect that
-it's a binary file and automatically set the mode. And it does:
-
- zopeni fixed file format - using blk I/O
- zopeni binary flag at open=0
- zopeni ifile_bmode=1
- zopeni binary=0
- zopeni autoswitch from TEXT to BINARY
- zopeni RMS operations completed ok
-
-but then in gnfile():
-
- if (!server || (server && ((whatru & WMI_FLAG) == 0)))
- binary = gnf_binary; /* Restore prevailing transfer mode */
-
-Well, since VMS sets text/binary mode automatically when sending files,
-this code can (and should) be skipped in VMS. gnfile(): ckcfns.c, 2 Mar 2007.
-
-Variation 2: BINARY or SET FILE TYPE BINARY doesn't force binary mode. But
-SET FTP TYPE BINARY does. But BINARY does indeed call doftptyp() so what's
-the problem? We do indeed set ftp_typ to 1 but it gets reset somewhere
-before we call zopeni(). But then zopeni() puts it back to 1. Tracing
-through a transfer, it looks like all of this works right, it's only that
-the file transfer display says TEXT when the transfer is really in binary
-mode. This is because screen() is called before openi(). I wonder if we
-can call scrft() from the ftp module... No, that would be too easy. OK,
-sendrequest calls openi() and sets the file mode; putfile() calls
-screen(SCR_FN), which prints the transfer mode. But putfile calls
-sendrequest() after it puts up the screen that says the file type. So it
-looks like sendrequest() has to call screen(SCR_FN) again if it changes the
-file type. OK, that did it. ckuusx.c, ckcftp.c, 2 Mar 2007.
-
-The BINARY and TEXT (ASCII) commands do not inhibit automatic type switching
-in VMS. They don't in Unix either. They never have. Should they? I think
-so, otherwise what good are they? Plus we want the Kermit FTP client to
-behave like the others. I added code for this but it doesn't work, due to
-the layers and layers of text/binary detection and switching and
-if-this-but-then-if-that... Anyway, no harm done. The normal rule is:
-when you PUT a file, Kermit figures out on a per-file basis whether to use
-text or binary mode unless you include a /TEXT (/ASCII) or /BINARY switch
-in the PUT (or MPUT) command. ckuus[r3].c, ckcftp.c, 2 Mar 2007.
-
-Wed Mar 7 16:21:13 2007 WROTE SHORT TEST PROGRAM for ttruncmd (the openpty
-version) on Mac OS X. On dulce: ~/kermit/ttpty.c / ttpty.sh. It starts the
-external protocol in the lower fork. The command to run is a command-line
-argument. Sending and receiving files with Kermit works OK. But again, the
-standalone program totally fails when I use sz or lsz as the external
-protocol. So it looks like we can rule out any environmental effects of
-running the code inside C-Kermit.
-
-Mon Mar 12 16:52:20 2007: Put some effort into making ttpty.c more useful;
-added a debug log. Found that for some reason, at least on Mac OS X,
-select() always timed out at the the end. I added a SIGCHLD alarm and that
-seems to handle the fork exit condition very nicely. Now we can send (say)
-a 3MB file at good speed on Ethernet (1Mcps) considering the debugging, etc,
-and it terminates instantly. But when sending a file into ttptycmd (with
-"gkermit -r"), things go wrong at the end -- the Z packet is never
-acknowledged. This is reproducible. Maybe this is a good lead.... The log
-shows that select() timed out, even though the gkermit fork had not yet
-exited (or finished). It looks like gkermit sent the Ack, ttpty.c read it
-from the pty and sent it out the net:
-
- 0003: read pty=8 <-- read Ack from pty
- 0003: loop top have_pty=1
- 0003: loop top have_net=1
- 0003: FD_SET pty_in
- 0003: FD_SET ttyfd in
- 0003: FD_SET ttyfd out=8
- 0003: nfds=5
- 0003: select=1
- 0003: FD_ISSET ttyfd out
- 0003: write net=8 <-- send ack to net
- 0003: loop top have_pty=1
- 0003: loop top have_net=1
- 0003: FD_SET pty_in
- 0003: FD_SET ttyfd in
- 0003: nfds=5
- 0009: select=0
- 0009: select timeout - have_pty=1
-
-But Ack never arrived. This is a streaming transfer. But nope, streaming
-is not the problem. If I disable streaming ("gkermit -Sr"), we hang in in
-the middle of sending the data. If I use small packets, we don't hang:
-1000 is OK, 2000 is not. In fact, the cutoff is 1024. OK, TBC...
-
-Wed 14 Mar 2007: Receiving a file thru ttpty "gkermit -e 1200 -Srd"
-produces a debug log that shows that gkermit gets a lot of EAGAIN errors
-when it tries to read from its stdin. In fact, it takes 6 tries (read()
-calls) to read the S packet (27 bytes). Then when the first data packet
-arrives (1200 bytes), read() never returns even one single byte. The
-timeout interval is 15 seconds and it times out repeatedly. Added a
-primitive hex dump to the ttpty debug log for each read/write (showing only
-the first 24 characters and the last character, so it fits on one line).
-Tried uploading a file. The S, F, and A packets (short) are received and
-Ack'd OK, but then ttpty select() times out, never receiving even one byte
-from the D packet. Clearly, when the pty driver receives a burst of > 1K
-bytes, stops working. As before, if I limit the packets to < 1K, it works
-fine.
-
-Can I send an 8-bit binary file? Nope. ttpty reads the binary data just
-fine from the net and writes it exactly as it was received to the pty, but
-the first time we write an 8-bit byte, we never hear back from the PTY
-again. But the log shows that when the initial 7-bit packets from the pty,
-it looks like the PTY is not in rawmode, because these packets end with ^J
-rather than ^M. Calling pty_make_raw() on the masterfd and slavefd
-explicitly, however, doesn't change anything. It doesn't matter if I do
-this in the lower fork or the upper fork. So maybe it's the actual
-semantics of pty_make_raw() that are wrong.
-
-Thu 15 Mar 2007: Went thru all the terminal mode flags in Mac OS X; didn't
-help. Changed hex dump to show whole packet. Put hex dump routine in a
-private copy of G-Kermit. Tried to transfer an 8-bit file, logging both
-ttpty and gkermit. Compared what ttpty received on stdin with what it sent
-to the pty (same) and what was received by G-Kermit (same). Then I realized
-that my little test program was not putting its controlling terminal into
-raw mode; when I did that, I could upload binary files (streaming, 2MB/sec).
-And with Zmodem too (with rz; lrz doesn't work for some reason). Looking
-back at the original in ckutio.c, I see that ttptycmd() never called
-ttpkt(). Maybe that was the trouble all along. (Yup, but maybe not the
-whole trouble.)
-
-Moving back to C-Kermit and the original ttptycmd() routine, adding the call
-to ttpkt(), and stripping out a lot of cruft, and moving the pty_make_raw()
-code to ckupty.c, Kermit uploads and downloads (streaming) work fine in
-Solaris. Zmodem sends a file, but then the transfer hangs at the very end,
-as if the signoff protocol were lost. This happens on Solaris. If I move
-back to Mac OS X, everything works just fine. Then, making a Kerberized
-connection from the Mac to NetBSD, I can send files from the Mac with both
-Zmodem and Kermit. Receiving... Kermit OK. Zmodem... Nope. "rz:
-Persistent CRC or other ERROR" (and created a 265MB debug.log!)
-
-Fri 16 Mar 2007: ttptycmd() was for sending files with Zmodem across
-encrypted connections. But it occurred to me that it's necessary for
-clear-text connections too; e.g. Telnet, where 0xff has to be doubled. Of
-course Zmodem doesn't do that itself, so there's no way Zmodem external
-protocol could work when executed over a Telnet connection, and in fact
-it doesn't. I wonder why I ever thought it did.
-
-Wed 21 Mar 2007: Back to where we left off a week ago. Trying C-Kermit's
-ttptycmd() on the Mac again, in remote mode:
-
- . G-Kermit send txt (kst): OK 832Kcps
- . G-Kermit recv txt (kr): OK 425Kcps
- . G-Kermit send bin (ksb): OK 1000Kcps
- . G-Kermit recv bin (kr): OK 188Kcps
-
-And Zmodem:
-
- . sz txt (zst): OK 563Kcps
- . sz bin (zsb): OK 714Kcps
- . rz txt (zr): OK 863Kcps
- . rz bin (zr): OK 198Kcps
-
-So in remote mode, everything works. Now let's try a clear-text Telnet
-connection...
-
- . G-Kermit send txt (kst): OK 841Kcps
- . G-Kermit recv txt (krt): OK 391Kcps
- . G-Kermit send bin (ksb): OK 811Kcps
- . G-Kermit recv bin (krb): OK 171Kcps
-
-And Zmodem over the same clear-text telnet connection:
-
- . sz txt (zst): OK 91Kcps (*)
-
-Kermit is sending sz messages like "sz 3.73 1-30-03 finished." to the
-host, which tries to execute them, after the transfer is finished.
-Of course "sz" is a command, but:
-
- sz: cannot open 3.73: No such file or directory
- sz: cannot open 1-30-03: No such file or directory
- sz: cannot open finished.: No such file or directory
-
-Did I lose that code that dis-redirects stderr when I went back to using the
-pty code from the ckupty module? No, it's there and it's being executed.
-Apparently the copy of sz I have is writing its "finished" message to stdout
-because "sz blah 2> /dev/null" does not suppress it. Starting again with
-lsz instead of sz:
-
- . sz txt (lzst): OK 413Kcps
- . sz bin (lzsb): OK FAILED (*)
- . rz txt (lzrt): OK
- . rz bin (lzrb): OK
-
-(*) Sigh. Using lsz, we get "garbage count exceeded" errors and eventual
-failure. But using regular sz, we get the extraneous message that starts
-sz on the far tend, and the resulting getty babble.
-
-But even without changing the code, it will work one minute, and then fail
-consistently the next. For example, I was able to send files with sz
-successfully over and over, but with the getty babble at the end. Then,
-after trying lsz and then going back to sz, every attempt at sending a file
-quits with "Got ZCAN". The difference has to be that Kermit always does at
-least some minimal encoding of C0/C1 control characters such NUL and DEL and
-IAC, and I doubt that Zmodem does.
-
-http://zssh.sourceforge.net/ says:
-
- If file transfer is initiated but never completes (ie a line like :
-
- Bytes Sent: 0/ 513 BPS:0 ETA 00:00 Retry 0: Got ZCAN
-
- can be seen, but transfer never completes), chances are the pty/tty on one
- of the systems are not 8-bit clean. (Linux is 8-bit clean, NetBSD is not).
- Using the -e (escape) option of rz should solve this problem.
-
-It doesn't, at least not with lrz. And yes, the receiving end happens to be
-NetBSD. But it looks like the zssh people have been down this road too.
-
-But with rz and sz, it worked. Once. Twice. Three times. But of course,
-with the getty babble at the end. This can be taken care of by doing:
-
- rz -eq ; cat > foo
-
-which puts "sz 3.73 1-30-03 finished" and any other messages in foo (but you
-have to type ^D to finish the cat). Using this method I was also able to
-send an 8K binary file that contained a test pattern of all 256 possible byte
-values. Then I tried a 3MB binary executable. All OK. So here we go again:
-
- . sz txt (zst): OK
- . sz bin (zsb): OK
- . rz txt (zrt):
- . rz bin (zrb):
-
-Downloading fails about halfway through a fairly large file. I tried an
-even bigger file, guaranteed to be 100% ASCII; same thing -- halfway
-through: "rz: Persistent CRC or other ERROR". But it worked with a smaller
-version of the same file (82K versus 2MB). Tried again with the bigger
-version, it failed in exactly the same way at exactly the same spot: byte
-number 1048320. But this is just ASCII text so it can't be a transparency
-problem. Substituting another plain ASCII file of the same size but totally
-different contents, it doesn't fail (2.36MB). Back to the previous file, it
-fails again, but in a different spot (832960). So it's not totally
-deterministic.
-
-To round things out, I tried downloading the binary test-pattern file; it's
-only 8K. This failed.
-
- -4, --try-4k go up to 4K blocksize
- -B, --bufsize N buffer N bytes (N==auto: buffer whole file)
- -e, --escape escape all control characters (Z)
- -E, --rename force receiver to rename files it already has
- -L, --packetlen N limit subpacket length to N bytes (Z)
- -l, --framelen N limit frame length to N bytes (l>=L) (Z)
-
-Tried again with "sz -L 256 -B 256 -4aeq". Doesn't change anything.
-
-NOTE: Mac OS X rz 3.73 1-30-03 does not support -e.
-NetBSD rz 0.12.20 does support -e.
-
-Thu 22 Mar 2007: It occurs to me that ttpkt() might still be a problem;
-maybe it's the network connection and not the pty that is not transparent
-enough. To test this theory I did "stty raw ; stty -a" and then copied all
-of the flag values into ttpkt in the BSD44ORPOSIX section:
-
- . rz txt (zrt): OK (2.36MB file, worked 2 out of 3 times)
- . rz bin (zrb): "rz: Persistent CRC or other ERROR"
-
-A little more fiddling with the flags and I got the 8K binary test pattern
-to SEEM to download OK (in the sense that rz gave a 0 return code) but the
-file itself was truncated, always at 224. If I changed the test pattern
-file to not include any bytes with value 224 (0xe0) or 255 (0xff), the
-download worked. So we have a transparency problem somewhere. The debug
-log shows that all byte values are being received from the network correctly
-so the problem has to occur when we try to feed them to the pty.
-
-But no amount of twiddling with the termios flags seems to let these
-characters pass through. Of course, since they are not in the C0 or C1
-control range, "sz -e" doesn't quote them (which it does by prefixing with
-Ctrl-X and then adding 0x40 to the byte value so (e.g.) NUL becomes ^X@.
-Note that 255 does not cause problems because it coincides with the IAC
-character; the remote Telnet server doubles outbound IACs, and Kermit's
-ttinc() undoubles them automatically (as the log shows).
-
-Trying to send a different file (a C-Kermit binary) shows that 255 is the
-real killer; the file is truncated where the first one appears (at about
-6K), even though some 224's precede it. Going back to the remote-mode test,
-I see the same thing happens with the binary test-pattern file, if I send it
-from K95 direct to rz-under-C-Kermit-in-remote-mode. So it has nothing to
-do with C-Kermit having a network connection. Yet if I send the same file
-direct from K95 to rz, it goes OK and the result is not truncated, so it's
-not Zmodem either. The data arrives to C-Kermit intact, so the failure is
-definitely in writing it to the rz process through the slave and master ptys.
-
-BUT if I send the same file from K95 to rz-under-ttpty, that works. What's
-the difference? Suppose I just transplant ttpty literally into C-Kermit...
-It makes no difference. When receiving the test-pattern, it truncates it
-in exactly the same place.
-
-Well, all this is on Mac OS X. What if I move it to a different platform?
-OK, building on Solaris and following the exact same procedure, ttptycmd()
-doesn't even use the network connection. I think that's because rzsz on
-Solaris is hardwired to use the controlling terminal and can't be
-redirected, even in a pty?
-
-Moved to NetBSD.
-
- . sz txt (zst): Failed ("Got ZCAN")
- . sz bin (zsb):
- . rz txt (zrt): OK
- . rz bin (zrb):
-
-Well, this is a big mess. Sending doesn't work (or sometimes it does but
-reports that it didn't). Receiving... well, actually it's the same thing;
-the file is completely transferred but then the final protocol handshake is
-lost. The local C-Kermit returns to its prompt, but rz is still running:
-
- Retry 0: Got TIMEOUT
- Retry 0: TIMEOUT
- Retry 0: Got TIMEOUT
- Retry 0: TIMEOUT
- Retry 0: Got TIMEOUT
- Retry 0: TIMEOUT
- Retry 0: Got TIMEOUT
- Retry 0: TIMEOUT
- Retry 0: Got TIMEOUT
- Retry 0: TIMEOUT
- Retry 0: Got TIMEOUT
-
-I don't see how that is even possible. Even after I exit from Kermit the
-messages keep coming, even though ps doesn't show the rz process anywhere.
-Looking at the code, I see a place where end_pty() was still commented out
-from the ttpty.c episode, I uncommented it. But still:
-
- . sz txt (zst): Fails ("Got ZCAN")
- . sz bin (zsb): Fails instantly (but with no diagnostic)
- . rz txt (zrt): OK
- . rz bin (zrb): Fails with tons of "Bad CRC", "Gargage Count exceeded"
-
-Conclusion for the day: I think this is hopeless. Even if I can get it to
-work somewhere, the results depend on the exact Zmodem software, how it uses
-stdin/out vs stderr versus getting its own nonredirectable file descriptor,
-versus the Zmodem version on the other end and which options are available
-on each, versus the pty and select() quirks on each platform, and on and on.
-It will be so hard to explain and to set up that nobody would ever use it.
-It would be better to just implement Zmodem internally.
-
-Fri 23 Mar 2007: Went back to the small test program, ttpty.c. Tried
-setting both the master and the slave pty to rawmode, even though I have
-never seen any other software that did this. I had it receive the binary
-test pattern file; it worked. I made a bigger test-pattern file, 3MB,
-containing single, double, and triple copies of each byte in byte order and
-in random order, this one was accepted too.
-
-So it would seem that the ckupty.c module is something to avoid after all.
-It's full of stuff I don't understand and probably should not undo. So
-changing C-Kermit's ttptycmd() to manage its own pty again, using openpty()
-(which is not portable), I got it all to work in remote mode: Kermit
-text/binary up/down and Zmodem text/binary up/down. But in local mode on
-the client side of a Telnet connection...
-
- zst: OK, but we still get the getty babble at the end that starts sz.
- zsb: OK, ditto. This is with the 3MB test-pattern file.
- zrt: Not OK -- "Persistent CRC or other ERROR"
- zrb: Not OK -- got the cutoff at 224 again "Persistent CRC or other ERROR"
-
-It's close. But actually this was still with USE_CKUPTY_C defined. When I
-undefined it, it was back to being totally broken. Start over. (Check the
-new cfmakeraw() code.)
-
-Tue 27 Mar 2007: Starting over. Back to ttpty.c. Let's verify, VERY
-CAREFULLY, that it really does work, using the most stressful of the four
-tests: sending the big (3.2768MB) binary test pattern from K95 into rz
-through ttpty, logging everything. ttpty definitely receives the big file
-smoothly with no errors or hiccups when I have it set to use the master side
-of the pty for i/o. The application program (Zmodem in this case) runs on
-the slave, and the network and/or control program communicates with the
-master. This implies that Zmodem controls the terminal modes of the slave,
-and ttpty should be concerned with those of the master. Doing it this way
-in ttpty confirms this.
-
-Fine. But if I tell ttpty to SEND a file with sz, nothing happens. Ditto
-with lsz. Select times out waiting for input from the pty. But if I
-manually tell K95 to RECEIVE /PROTOCOL:ZMODEM it works OK. Somehow sz's
-initial B000000 string is being swallowed somewhere, and it's waiting for
-a reply from the receiver. sigh... But "ttpty gkermit -s filename" works
-fine. What's the difference? It has nothing to do with stdout vs stderr;
-sz is not writing to stderr at all. Is it some timing thing between the
-forks? Aha. It's that I change the modes of the pty master in one fork
-while sz is already starting in the other fork.
-
-OK, good, now for the first time we have Kermit and Zmodem both able to
-upload and download a large worst-case binary test-pattern file... in
-remote mode. Now taking today's lessons and fitting them back into
-C-Kermit so I can try it local mode...
-
-Using G-Kermit as the external protocol, first in remote mode... All good:
-text/binary up/down. The "halting problem" is solved by SIGCHLD, which
-catches fork termination instantly and lets ttptycmd() know there is no more
-pty. Zmodem:
-
- zst: OK
- zsb: OK
- zrt: OK
- zrb: OK
-
-That's a first. Next, repeat in local mode, in which C-Kermit is the client
-and has made a Telnet connection to another host over a secure (Kerberos V)
-connection:
-
- kst: OK zst: ...
- ksb: OK
- krt: OK
- krb: OK
-
-It seems we can never end a day on a high note. Somehow I seem to have
-broken regular internal Kermit protocol transfers over encrypted connections
--- the en/decryption engine loses sync. But they still work OK over a
-clear-text Telnet connection.
-
-Today's code in ~/80/dulce.tar (27 Mar 2007).
-
-Added makefile target solaris10g+openssl. Gathered all the standard CFLAGS
-for Solaris into cdcdeb.h so they don't have to be included in every single
-makefile target for Solaris. On local Solaris 10 host OpenSSL is in
-/opt/openssl-0.9.8e/. Tried the new makefile target, works OK. Also made
-solaris10+openssl for Sun CC, but couldn't test it because I can't find any
-Solaris 10 host that has Sun CC. Built with gcc at another site that has
-OpenSSL 0.9.8f-dev, all OK. ckcdeb.h, makefile, 24 Jun 2007.
-
-It occurs to me that Kermit transfers on secure connections might have been
-broken by the changes I made back in February to ttinl() for John Dunlap.
-Here, for the first time, we invoke myunrd() to push a byte back into the
-input queue, and there is also some funny business with "csave", which
-changed, and which an old comment notes that it has to be treated specially
-when encrypting. So it could be that the broken Kermit transfer has nothing
-to do with the work on external protocols, and that putting back the
-previous ttinl() will fix it. But now I can't seem to make a Kerberized
-connection from Panix to Panix, even though I can make one from Columbia to
-Panix. This means I have to build a Kerberized binary from the current
-source code on either Solaris or Mac OS X. Trying Solaris
-first... [~/solaris9k5/mk5.sh] This didn't work the first time due to
-undefined krb5_init_ets, which is referenced if MIT_CURRENT is not defined
-(it should be for Kerberos 5 1.05 and later and we have 1.42 here), tried
-again with -DMIT_CURRENT=1... Nope, that one totally blew up in ck_crp.c.
-Later, Jeff says krb5_init_ets is a no-op in Kerberos 1.4.x and later,
-so I added an #ifdef (NO_KRB5_INIT_ETS) for skipping it; now it builds and
-runs OK. ckuath.c, makefile, 9 Jul 2007.
-
-Meanwhile, using C-Kermit on Mac OS X, which makes the Kerberized connection
-just fine, but still has the problem transferring files over it. Packet log
-shows:
-
- s-00-01-^A9 Sz/ @-#Y3~Z! z0___F"U1@A^M
- r-00-01-^A9 Y~/ @-#Y3~^>J)0___J"U1@I
- s-01-01-^A(!Fx.x)(V^M
- r-xx-08-<timeout>
- S-01-08-^A(!Fx.x)(V^M
- r-xx-08-<timeout>
- S-01-08-^A(!Fx.x)(V^M
- r-xx-16-<timeout>
-
-Note that S packet is sent, received, and Ack'd OK. The F packet is sent but
-is never Ack'd. Tried this several times and noticed that it's just
-receiving that is screwed up, not sending. After ^C'ing out of the
-transfer, I can still type commands, and they are executed on the far end,
-but the results coming back are gibberish. Mon Jul 9 16:08:22 2007 (come
-back to this later... substitute Dev.27 ttinl for current one and see if
-the problem goes away, and if so, conditionalize the new code for clear-text
-connections).
-
-Built C-Kermit with Kerberos 5 on Solaris with a version of ckutio.c that
-uses the old ttinl() and transferred a file OK over a Kerberized connection.
-So now it's just a matter of reconciling the old and new ttinl. The easiest
-way to do this is to have new ttinl() chain to old ttinl() if the connection
-is encrypted, which is what I did and it works fine. At some point the two
-versions of ttinl() should be reconciled. ckutio.c, 12 Aug 2007.
-
-There was a function, islink(), used in only one place (ckuus6.c) that had
-the same name as a commonly used scalar variable, and it was missing a
-prototype. Changed its name to isalink() and added the prototype (Unix
-only), ckuus6.c, ckufio.c, ckcdeb.h. 12 Aug 2007.
-
-Revisiting the ASCII and BINARY top-level commands, which are supposed to
-be like in other FTP clients, but don't seem to have any effect. I added a
-new routine to the FTP module, doftpglobaltype(), that sets the global,
-sticky, permanent transfer mode (ASCII or BINARY) (TENEX could be added to
-if anybody asks). These commands (now that they work) are different from
-SET FTP TYPE { ASCII, BINARY }, which set the *default* transfer mode when
-automatic switching fails for a given file. ckuusr.c, ckcftp.c, 12 Aug 2007.
- (notify: Matt <mlist@cmcflex.com>)
-
-Even though the code hasn't changed, suddenly we're getting:
-
- "ckuusx.c", line 5682: warning: implicit function declaration: tgetent
- "ckuusx.c", line 6183: warning: implicit function declaration: tgetstr
- "ckuusx.c", line 6262: warning: implicit function declaration: tputs
- "ckuusx.c", line 6266: warning: implicit function declaration: tgoto
-
-in ckuusx.c on Solaris 9. <curses.h> is still in /usr/include, dated 2002.
-A quick search shows the missing functions are hiding in <term.h>, which
-until now was included only in Linux. Added a USE_TERM_H clause. No, that
-doesn't help, the prototypes are not selected at compile time; there are
-#ifdefs in that file that skip over these prototypes. I had to put them in
-the code under #ifdef BUG999..#endif (I could have used a longer name like
-#ifdef ADD_PROTOTYPES_FOR_CURSES_FUNCTIONS, but that would not be portable).
-ckuusx.c, 12 Aug 2007.
-
-Also:
-
- "ckuusx.c", line 9232: warning: implicit function declaration: creat
-
-This is called in the IKSD dababase code, used for getting a lockfile.
-creat() is a Unixism in code that is supposed to be portable. But IKSD only
-runs on Unix and Windows, so I assume the Windows C library has a creat()
-function. Anyway, suddenly the Solaris header files seem to have blocked
-whatever path previously existed to the creat() prototype (which is in
-<fcntl.h>), so I added an #include in the appropriate spot. ckuusx.c,
-12 Aug 2007.
-
-Kermit functions for converting the number base -- \fradix(), \fhexify(),
-\unfhexify() -- did not work with big numbers; ckradix() was missed in the
-CK_OFF_T conversion. Fixed in ckclib.c, 12 Aug 2007.
-
-Updated the help text for ASCII, BINARY, and SET FTP TYPE to clarify the
-semantics. ckuus2.c, ckcftp.c, 12 Aug 2007.
-
-Error messages were printed upon failure to open any of the four log file,
-even with SET QUIET ON. Fixed in ckuus4.c, 12 Aug 2007.
-
-Built OK on NetBSD 1.3_RC3. Tried to build secure version but the libraries
-had disappeared. 13 Aug 2007.
-
-Built OK on Mac OS X 10.4.9. Tried the secure version, macosx10.4+krb5+ssl.
-Here we get the usual pile of "pointer targets in passing argument 1 of
-(function name) differ in signedness", regarding security functions, but it
-built OK. 13 Aug 2007.
-
-Reconciling the two ttinl's... On encrypted connections myread() returns
-encrypted bytes; ttinl() has to decrypt them; it wasn't doing this in the
-lookahead section so I fixed it. The new code works on both encrypted and
-clear-text connections. I removed the chaining to oldttinl(), and
-oldttinl() itself. ckutio.c, 13 Aug 2007.
-
- (Wouldn't it make more sense and be more efficient and less confusing
- for myfillbuf() to do the decrypting?)
-
-When C-Kermit uses Zmodem as an external protocol, it doesn't seem to scan
-files before sending them to set text or binary mode appropriately. It's
-that external protocols bypass Kermit's whole "get next file" mechanism; the
-(possibly wild) filespec is simply passed to the external protocol program.
-Changing this would be a very big deal. But if only one file is being sent
-(the filespec is not wild) it's easy enough to check. I added this to the
-external protocols section of the protocol module. It can be overridden in
-any of the regular ways (/TEXT or /BINARY switch on SEND command, SET
-PATTERNS OFF, SET TRANSFER MODE MANUAL, etc). ckcpro.w, 13 Aug 2007.
-
-[FTP SEND /RECURSIVE]
-Peter Crowley reported a problem with FTP recursive uploads getting the
-directory tree wrong when the previous pathname was a left substring of the
-new pathname (e.g. foo/bar/ and foo/bar2/). The logic did not handle this
-case and created the bar2 directory as a subdirectory of bar, rather than as
-a parallel directory. Fixed in syncdir() and tested with various edge cases.
-ckcftp.c 14 Aug 2007.
-
- notify <peter.crowley@alumni.utexas.net>
-
-Added CD messages to FTP BRIEF display to track the ups and downs of
-recursive uploads. ckcftp.c, 14 Aug 2007.
-
-The OUTPUT command gave a misleading error message ("Connection to xxx not
-open") when used on a serial port that was, indeed, open but was not
-presenting the Carrier signal, when CARRIER-WATCH was not OFF. Added a new
-message for this, and some others. ckuus5.c, 14 Aug 2007.
-
-Sending from the command line, e.g. kermit -s foo, did not give an
-informative error message if the file could not be found or opened. Fixed
-in ckuusy.c, 14 Aug 2007.
-
-OK, back to ttptycmd.... It seems that back on March 27th, I got everything
-working but I thought that there was still something wrong with it because
-an unrelated problem so I put it aside. The version of ttpty.c from that
-date worked OK, and it looks like I updated ckutio.c from it, but that
-version of ckutio.c was put aside. Since then I have been working on the
-ckutio.c version that was NOT put aside and so now I have to reconcile the
-two:
-
- ~/80/ttypty/20070327/ckutio.c
- ~/80/ckutio.c
-
-As a first cut I did this simply by replacing the contents of the #ifdef
-CK_REDIR section of the latter with that of the former. Of course in
-Solaris this comes up with openty() implicitly declared at compile time and
-unresolved at link time. So the first task is to get HAVE_OPENPTY defined
-for platforms that have it and have the others use the ttruncmd(). For
-starters I put an #ifdef block in ckcdeb.h that defines HAVE_OPENPTY for
-Linux, FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD, and Mac OS X. Ones that don't have
-openpty() include AIX, HP-UX, and Solaris. Others like SCO I don't know but
-I doubt it. The real solution is to get the ckupty.c module to work but one
-thing at a time... This version is supposed work with secure builds on the
-openpty() platforms, and on the others like Solaris, if an external protocol
-is attempted on a secure (encrypted) connection, an error message is
-printed and the command fails. ckutio.c, 14 Aug 2007.
-
-How to test? Apparently I did all my testing on Panix before, and that's
-where all my Zmodem builds are, but now when I build a Kerberized version
-(which works if I do it on the right pool host), it won't make a local
-connection, and there is no other place I can connect to that has a
-Kerberized Telnet server. I can, however, connect to Panix from here, using
-the same code, but on Mac OS X...
-
-Slight detour: Got access to AIX again (5.3.0.0). Picky compiler, some
-things needed fixing.... Also it says "1506-507 (W) No licenses available.
-Contact your program supplier to add additional users. Compilation will
-proceed shortly" and of course it goes kind of slow. For some reason, I
-can't do streaming transfers into AIX over a local network (to its SSH
-server), but windowed transfers are OK. Anyway, noting that we've been
-using the same basic makefile target since AIX 4.2, changing nothing but the
-version herald, I made a new target, simply "aix", that picks up the AIX
-version automatically and sets the herald from it. Ditto for aix+openssl,
-but on this host requires setting SSLINC and SSLLIB to /opt/ssl/include and
-/opt/ssl/lib. Also the make program here was extremely sensitive to spacing
-so I had to make some minor edits to get the link step to work for the SSL
-version. ckuusy.c, makefile, 14-15 Aug 2007.
-
-Got rid of the special Panix secure NetBSD target, replaced it with a
-regular one, which is invoked in the normal way by defining K5INC and K5LIB
-to point to to where the stuff is hidden. Cleaned up and modernized the
-comments in the makefile a bit. makefile 15 Aug 2007.
-
-Changed some data types and added some casts to ckctel.c to do away with
-tons of "pointer targets in passing argument 1 of 'xxx' differ in signedness"
-warnings. 15 Aug 2007.
-
-Set up Mac OS X as the testbed for ttptycmd(), with Panix as the remote
-partner over a Kerberos 5 connection. The first test is to send a 300K
-text file with gkermit as the external protocol. It worked fine, and the
-debug log showed all the right components were active (namely encryption and
-ttptycmd) [kermit/zmodem send/receive text/binary]:
-
- Kermit Zmodem
- kst OK zst OK
- ksb OK zsb OK
- krt OK zrt OK
- krb OK zrb Failed "rz: Persistent CRC or other ERROR"
-
-We've seen this before. The problem is 0xff, Telnet IAC, as I proved to
-myself by constructing a 3MB file that contained every byte but 0xff in every
-mixture and order and transferring it successfully over the same connection.
-Presumably the Telnet server is doubling IACs, whereas of course rz is not
-undoubling, thus the CRC error. This is progress. 15 Aug 2007.
-
-Log shows that indeed every IAC in the source file arrives doubled. Adding
-code to remove the first IAC of every adjacent pair, a small test file with
-different-length runs of IACs transfers OK. The 3MB all.bin file does not.
-
-Starting over... I can receive a big text file with Zmodem OK. The 3.2MB
-binary test pattern that contains no IACs failed after 1.8MB, but the part
-that it transferred was OK. A second try, almost the whole thing arrived,
-it stopped just 584 bytes short of the end. Could be that file size is a
-separate problem. Making a new copy exactly 1MB long... Well, that's
-interesting, this one too stopped just short of the end. And again, the
-same thing. When connecting back to the host, the last Zmodem packet can
-be seen on the screen; it's as if the local Zmodem exited before reading
-the last packet... But OK, if I change the options on the remote sz
-sender to use small blocks, etc, then it works.
-
-Now, changing from the 1MB no-IAC-binary test pattern, to the 1MB all-values
-test pattern, we fail after 81K. But the part that was transferred is
-correct. Second try, same thing, but 57K. Third: 40K. Each time, upon
-connecting back, the session is completely dead.
-
-IF I HAVE TO undouble IACs for incoming files, don't I have to double them
-going out? To send a block to net we just call ttol(), but ttol() doesn't
-do any doubling (because Kermit protocol always quotes 0xff). To see what
-happens, I changed the ttol() call to ttoc() in a loop that doubles IACs. I
-tested this by sending the full 3.2MB test pattern, which worked fine.
-
-For receiving, it's slow but it works OK with files that don't contain IACs
-(my concern was that IACs might appear in outbound files or in Zmodem
-protocol messages). It receives the 1MB no-IAC test pattern, so there are
-no problems with protocol or timing. But the full test pattern always gets
-cut off, but at different points, as before, with the remote session dead.
-Changing the Zmodem receiver from rz to lrz on the local end (since the
-sender on the remote end is lsz) does not change the behavior.
-
-Anyway, I went back and replaced the byte loop with something more
-efficient, and it goes about 20 times faster. But this doesn't help either,
-it only makes it fail faster. But aha, what if a doubled IAC is broken
-across successive pty reads -- we have to make the "previous character"
-memory persistent. Well, that was a good insight, but it still didn't fix
-it. The log shows the IAC handling code is working fine.
-
-What does sz say? Capturing its stderr to a file... "Retry 1: Got ZCAN".
-Next time: "Retry 1: Got TIMEOUT". Next time: Got ZCAN.
-
-Trying different Zmodem options... apparently I don't need to use short
-blocks. But I do need to use -e, probably because of Telnet NVT treatment
-of carriage return; without -e, there is a "persistent CRC error". -O
-disables timeouts, but this makes no difference.
-
-OK, we still have two Big Problems:
-
- 1. When a long file has no IACs, the final < 1K of the file is not received.
- 2. When a long file has IACs, the transfer generally stops very early.
-
-Problem 1: the transfer consistently fails less than 1K from the end of the
-file. Upon CONNECT back to the host, a big Zmodem packet is sitting there
-waiting to be read, which means ttptycmd()'s copy of rz is terminating
-early. Can we catch it in the debug log? Doing this takes forever and
-writes a GB to the disk... And then the problem doesn't happen. Also, I
-can receive a HUGE text file almost instantly with no errors at all.
-
-Switching to lrz on the receiving end, now I see the error messages, about
-300 lines like this:
-
- Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
- Bytes received: 872352/1000000 BPS:85464 ETA 00:01 Retry 0: Bad CRC
- Bytes received: 892448/1000000 BPS:86690 ETA 00:01 Retry 0: Bad CRC
- Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
- Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
- Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
- Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
- Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
- Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
- Retry 0: Got ERROR
- Bytes received: 898336/1000000 BPS:84293 ETA 00:01 Retry 0: Bad CRC
- Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
- Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
- Bytes received: 900384/1000000 BPS:83751 ETA 00:01 Bad escape sequence
- 2fRe
- try 0: Bad data subpacket
- Bytes received: 941472/1000000 BPS:86191 ETA 00:00 Retry 0: Bad CRC
- Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
-
-Even when it succeeds, it gets these. But if I receive a text file, no
-matter how big, no errors or retries or timeouts at all. So it appears that
-there is only one problem: a big-time lack of transparency regarding 8-bit
-and/or control characters. The odd thing is, it's not that the characters
-can't get through -- they all can -- but they seem to cause transitory
-blockages. 16 Aug 2007.
-
-Cleaned up the remaining pointer signedness warnings in ckutio.c, but this
-was a mistake, it broke Kerberos connections completely. Undid the changes.
-ckutio.c, 17 Aug 2007.
-
-Changed all return() in the fork()==0 section of ttptycmd() to exit().
-ckutio.c, 17 Aug 2007.
-
-Tried explicitly setting the slave pty to rawmode. Makes no difference.
-Tried using the Mac OS X (curses) raw() function, and also system("stty
-raw"); still no difference. Tried doing all of these in different
-combinations and orders. I found one combination that cuts the errors about
-in half, and the transfer of the no-IAC test pattern almost always succeeds
-(but it's slow). Anyway, it doesn't help much with the test pattern that
-contains IACs. Well, the code is more solid than it was before but
-functionally we have not advanced much if we can't download a binary file
-with Zmodem! On the other hand, we can upload them, and we can transfer
-text files in both directions, which is an improvement over the previous
-situation, in which the entire session would hang due to loss of
-synchronization of the encryption stream.
-
-Tried adding -funsigned-char to CFLAGS of Mac OS X target. It does not
-make the "signedness" warnings go away and it doesn't change the runtime
-symptoms.
-
-I tried a simpler version of pty_make_raw(), the one from Serg Iakovlev, but
-it was a total failure. That's encouraging though, because it indicates
-that pty_make_raw() is the right place to be working.
-
-Then I made pty_make_raw() set or unset every single terminal flag
-explicitly. This made no difference, but didn't hurt anything either.
-
-Then I made pty_make_raw() explicitly set all the c_cc[] characters to 0
-(but left c_cc[VMIN] as 1). This made no difference either.
-
-I checked pty_make_raw() against ttpkt() and the only difference I found in
-the terminal flags is that ttpkt() sets IGNPAR thinking it means "ignore
-parity errors" when really it means "discard any character that has a parity
-error" (at least according to Iakovlev) -- exactly the opposite. But I
-tried it both ways, no difference. 17 Aug 2007.
-
-I noticed that even Zmodem text receives can fail. They don't get any
-errors, they just get cut off shortly before the end. (But usually they
-succeed, and fast too, like 500K cps).
-
-What if I don't call pty_make_raw() at all on the slave pty?
-
-zrt: EESSSSSSSS: 80% good (E = stopped just before end but no other errors)
-
-zrb no-IAC test pattern, short blocks:
- 1. S/5 (success with 5 screens of errors.
- 2. S/7
- 3. S/7
- 4. S/6
- 5. E/7 (failed just before end)
- 6. S/7
- 7. S/6
- 8. S/6
- 9. S/6
-10. S/4
-
-So, lots of errors, but it recovered 90% of the time.
-Next, same thing, but without requesting short blocks:
-
- 1. E/5
- 2. S/5
- 3. E/4
- 4. S/5
- 5. S/5
- 6. S/5
- 7. X/0 (hard failure right away: "Got ZCAN"
- 8. S/5
- 9. S/5
-10. S/5
-
-So it doesn't look like short blocks make that much difference. Now what if
-I turn off prefixing? Bad CRC, fails immediately every time. Putting back
-pty_make_raw(slave), it still fails hard.
-
-Tried a new strategy with pty_make_raw(): rather than modify existing flags,
-I set all flags to 0, and then turn on only those few that we need like CS8.
-Now we get only 2.5 screens of errors instead 4-7 and the transfer rate is
-higher for binary files (all of the previous ones were under 100K CPS, while
-for text files it was 400-500K CPS):
-
- 1. S/2 195669 CPS
- 2. S/2 194720
- 3. E/3
- 4. S/2 192550
- 5. S/3 192325
- 6. S/3 145066
- 7. S/2 200689
- 8. S/3 188948
- 9. S/2 209461
-10. S/3 181991
-
-I noticed that there was no TIOCSTTY ioctl in the pty/fork setup sequence,
-which is recommended somewhere, so I tried that and it was a disaster; the
-entire session hung. I took it back out. 18 Aug 2007.
-
-Tried some transfers over a clear-text (not encrypted) connection with the
-same results: smooth, fast transfer of a big text file (400K cps); rocky but
-successful transfer of the no-IAC binary pattern file (135K cps). Switching
-back to ttruncmd(), the same binary file is received at 1.5M cps, and the
-no-IAC binary file totally fails after too many "Bad CRC"s; and we already
-know that any file that contains IACs will fail. One might say that
-ttptycmd() is better in every respect than ttruncmd() except in speed
-(when it works).
-
-Let's see if ttyptycmd still works in remote mode (to local K95):
- . sz / text works, but slowly.
- . lsz / text works but some wierd errors are reported.
- . lsz / binary / no IAC doesn't work at all (CRC-32 mismatch for a header;
- Unexpected control character ignored: 13, etc).
- . sz / binary / no IAC works OK but slow.
- . sz / binary / full test pattern with IAC works OK but slow.
- . Sending text into rz fails completely.
-
-What about ttruncmd() in remote mode?
- . send /text works, fast.
- . send /binary works, fast.
- . receive /text works, not so fast but not bad.
- . receive /binary works, not so fast but not bad.
-
-So we use ttruncmd() for remote mode, and we use it for local mode
-serial-port and modem connections, and we use ttptycmd() on network
-connections because (a) they might be encrypted, and (b) even if they are
-not, they use some protocol that we have to handle, e.g. Telnet, Rlogin.
-19 Aug 2007.
-
-Discovered that Sending binary files no longer works. Text is OK, binary
-transfers don't even start. This happens on both encrypted and clear-text
-connections. ttptycmd() is being used in both cases. But oddly enough,
-receiving binary still works as before. What did I break, and when?
-Oh, it was just the script, when I changed it from using sz to lsz. Putting
-it back to sz makes it work, even with the full 3.2MB binary pattern with
-IACs.
-
-I backed off the changes I made to ckctel.c to suppress some warnings, in
-view of the fact that similar changes to ckutio.c broke things so badly.
-19 Aug 2007.
-
-If sz is not given the -e flag, it sends control characters bare, except ^P,
-^Q, ^S, and ^X. ^X is the control prefix, so ^A is sent ^X followed by A.
-With -e, all C0 control chars are prefixed, but with ^X, which is, of
-course, a control character. Interestingly, the C1 analogs of ^P, ^Q, ^S
-(but not ^X and, unfortunately, not IAC) are also prefixed. -e makes no
-difference for 8-bit characters.
-
-If we have a Telnet connection and the server is in ASCII (NVT) mode, CR is
-always followed by LF or NUL. Well, it seems the server is putting us
-(Kermit) in binary mode in this case, but staying in ASCII mode itself.
-Added code to handle NVT byte stuffing and unstuffing in each direction
-independently, according to the TRANSMIT_BINARY state in that direction. I
-made a file containing just the bytes 0-31 and 127 and 128-159 and 255 (66
-bytes all together) and sending it from the host to C-Kermit, the local log
-shows that every control character was received correctly and all TELNET
-conversions were done right -- NUL removed after CR (and only after CR); IAC
-removed after IAC (and only after an IAC meant as a quote). For the first
-time, I can receive the 1MB all-values test pattern, but there are still
-tons of (correctable) CRC errors, so the transfer rate is really awful, like
-about 5% of what we get with a text file (25Kcps instead of 500).
-
-Further experimentation shows that the fundamental transparency problem is
-fixed; we can receive short files (say, 1K or less) containing absolutely
-any byte values in any combination with no errors at all. But once the file
-size reaches (say) 10K, we get CRC errors, like one every 2 or 3K of data.
-These are not deterministic. In successive transfers of the same file, they
-come in different spots. It's tempting to blame pty buffer overruns, but
-then text files would show the same behavior. When a binary file size
-exceeds, say, 1MB, the chances of successful completion go way down,
-independent of whether my external protocol is rz or lrz. I like lrz better
-because the error reports come out on the screen as the transfer is going
-on. Trying to download a real-world binary file -- a 2.2MB C-Kermit
-executable -- I get 4500 error messages but the transfer evenually succeeds,
-with an effective throughput of 21Kcps.
-
-Actually it turns out that "sz -a somebigtextfile" (2.2MB) also gets a lot
-of CRC errors. The -e flag (escape all control characters) makes the same
-big text file transfer with few or no errors. It's not sure-fire.
-Sometimes no errors, sometimes one or two, and sometimes a fatal error that
-kills the transfer.
-
-With binary files... a 32K binary file seems to make it every time. 40K
-fails about 50% of the time. 48K fails 60% and every time it fails, it has
-created a partial file of exactly 32K (32768 bytes). 96K fails 9 out of 10
-times, when it fails, the partial file is always 0 bytes, or 32768, or
-65536, but that just means that rz's file output buffer is 32K.
-
-Why, then, do binary files cause trouble if it is not a solid transparency
-problem? If a certain file can get through once, why can't it get through
-every time? When a character arrives at the pty, the pty driver probably
-takes a different path through its code, checking the terminal flags that
-would affect that character. I tried making Kermit's network read buffers
-very small but, surprisingly, this made things worse. I also tried making
-them very much bigger, which didn't help either. 24K still seems to be the
-right size.
-
-So, is it that some characters take longer to process than others? So long
-that data is lost due to lack of flow control between TCP and the pty? One
-way to test this theory is to slow Zmodem down. I tried "-l 32" which,
-according to the man page, tells sz to "wait for the receiver to acknowledge
-correct data every N (32 <= N <= 1024) characters. This may be used to
-avoid network over-run when XOFF flow control is lacking." Makes no
-difference. I also tried the -w (Window) switch, ditto. In fact there are
-all sorts of options to set the "window size", "packet length", "block
-size", and "frame length", but with no explanation of what these mean or how
-they are related. If I crank everything down to minimum value:
-
- lsz q -L 32 -l 32 -w 1
-
-I get 50% success with the 96K file instead of 10%. Adding -e, oddly
-enough, made it worse. I also tried setting the environment variable
-ZNULLS to different numbers like 512, no help there either.
-
-I tried making the read-from-net-write-to-pty buffer small (1K) but leaving
-the pty-to-net one big. This improves chances of success, but it's
-intolerably slow (3Kcps when the connection is capable of 500K).
-
-I also changed the write-to-pty operation from a single write() call of
-possibly many K characters to a byte loop, one write() per byte. Same
-result: success (but still about 300 recoverable errors), throughput 3Kcps.
-20 Aug 2007.
-
-With ttptycmd() configured to write to the pty in a byte loop, it is
-possible to delay each write. Adding a 10msec delay per character results
-in a transfer that runs at about 20 cps and (for the 96K test file) would
-take about 80 minutes to complete. And yet it still gets just as many
-errors. So it's not a matter of timing either. The errors come, on
-average, every file 388 bytes, but not at regular intervals.
-
-I tried the TIOCREMOTE ioctl on the pty master, as discussed somewhat
-obliquely in the Mac OS X "man pty" page; "This mode causes input to the
-pseudo terminal to be flow controlled and not input edited (regardless of
-the terminal mode)" -- sounds like just the ticket but it made no
-difference. Actually, looking at a man page on another OS (Solaris), it
-says this is only for lines of text, EOLs are supplied, so that would mess
-up the protocol. So remember: don't use this.
-
-Tried without O_NDELAY; the behavior was the same but the speed was much
-slower.
-
-Tried switching back to the ckupty.c routines on Mac OS X and found that it
-works now the same as with openpty(), except that I seem to get more getty
-babble at the end. But this means I can run some tests on Solaris. I moved
-the entire test environment from Mac OS X 10.4.9 to Solaris 9. But it
-doesn't work at all.
-
-Trying to figure out the ckupty.c modules again.
- . do_pty() calls pty_getpty() which returns in arg1 the fd of the pty master.
- . Then it creates a pipe as a way to tell when the child dies
- . Then it creates a fork:
- - The parent does a blocking read from the pipe
- - The child calls getptyslave() to get the pty slave
- and writes one byte to the pipe
- and then execs the command it's supposed to run
-Note that the file descriptor of the slave is known only to the lower fork.
-Therefore the lower fork is the one that has to set all the tty modes, etc.
-I took care of all that but the ckupty.c method doesn't work at all on
-Solaris. But it works "fine" on Mac OS X (the 32K all-bytes test file
-transfers instantly with no errors, but the 96K one errors out).
-
-The problem on Solaris is that pty_make_raw() fails on the masterfd (but not
-on the slavefd) with errno 25 "ioctl inappropriate for device". It doesn't
-matter whether I do it in ckupty.c or ckutio.c. I found a web page on
-kde.org that says Solaris does not allow tcget/setattr() on a pty master.
-But the Sun "knowledge base" is not open to the public. Well, presumably
-changes made to the slave are reflected in the master (comments in Solaris
-telnetd seem to confirm this...) Let's come back to Solaris later.
-
-Moving to a Linux with lrzsz installed... Built a Kerberos 5 version with
-USE_CKUPTY_C. Like on Mac OS X, it transfers short files OK and chokes on
-longer ones. Switched to openpty(), it behaves the same. So the problems
-on Mac OS X are evidently not OS-specific, which is good I guess, since that
-means finding the way around them will apply to more than one platform.
-21 Aug 2007.
-
-Look into TIOCSCTTY again. On System V based OS's, opening a pty acquires a
-controlling terminal automatically. On BSD-based OS's, no; you have to use
-the TIOCSCTTY on the slave file descriptor to give it one. I'm not sure why
-a controlling terminal would be needed, except that without one, the virtual
-device "/dev/tty" does not exist for the process that runs on the pty, and
-maybe the application that runs there (e.g. rzsz) checks for it. On the
-downside, having a controlling terminal opens the process up to terminal
-interrupts like SIGINT and SIGQUIT. Until now I have not been using this
-ioctl(). Results (in Linux):
-
- With TIOCSCTTY: 96K all-bytes test: 11 screens of errors, then success
- Without TIOCSCTTY: exactly the same.
-
-Tried the same thing with TIOCNOTTY instead of TIOCSCTTY, with exactly the
-same results (no effect whatsoever).
-
-There has to be a way to make this work, because Zmodem works through
-telnetd, which basically the same thing as ttptycmd(): a relay between the
-network and a pty. ttptycmd() is like telnetd backwards. Modern telnetds
-are not much help; they don't access ptys or the network directly, they go
-through "mux" devices so I can't see what they're doing to get transparency
-and flow control. An old BSD telnetd uses packet mode but that would be a
-big deal...
-
-I tried ignoring various signals like SIGTTOU and SITSTP, since some Telnet
-clients do this. No effect, no difference. Anyway, in Linux the transfers
-almost always finish OK despite the many errors. There is just some trick
-I'm missing to make the pty accept a stream of arbitrary bytes without
-hiccuping.
-
-What about Solaris, which uses ckupty.c? In streams-based OS's, where line
-disciplines and whatnot are pushed on top of the pty, it looks like the pty
-module saves the file descriptor of the "bare" slave pty (as 'spty') before
-pushing things onto it, and then later uses spty rather than the regular
-slave pty file descriptor when getting/setting terminal modes. I'm not sure
-what this is all about but it's definitely SysVish... It happens if
-STREAMSPTY is defined, but I noticed that STREAMSPTY is never defined
-anywhere. I tried defining it so we take an entirely different path through
-the code. It made absolutely no difference.
-
-Then I noticed that HAVE_STREAMS is not defined for Solaris either. Tried
-defining it, but the session didn't work at all, no i/o. Removing the
-HAVE_STREAMS definition but keeping the STREAMSPTY defined, I rebuilt and
-tried "set host /connect /pty emacs". I got an EMACS screen but could not
-type anything into it, which means that STREAMSPTY should not be defined
-either. Removed the definition and "set host /pty" works again. So what's
-the problem with ttptycmd()?
-
-In fact, ttptycmd() works on Solaris with Kermit as the external protocol,
-but not with Zmodem, not even with text files. So again, there is no
-fundamental problem with the code or the logic, it's Just A Matter Of
-Transparency to control and/or 8-bit characters -- some trick I don't know
-about.
-
-Looking at the Solaris debug log... I see that ckupty.c is calling
-init_termbuf() to set the tty modes of the master, not the slave, and
-set_termbuf() to set them, but you can't do that in Solaris, error 25. This
-is in getptyslave(). Shouldn't getptyslave() be setting the tty modes of
-the slave, not the master? I changed it to do this, but like all other
-changes, it made no difference. I checked to make sure that after the change,
-"set host /pty /connect emacs" still worked and it did.
-
-And then what... I had some code to redirect stderr in ckupty.c that was
-not being executing due to a typo. When I fixed the typo, poof, Zmodem
-binary transfers started working, or working as well as they work in Linux
-and Mac OS X. It turns out that if I don't redirect stderr, sz and rz
-just don't work. But lsz and lrz do. But if I do redirect it, I don't see
-the progress messages from lsz/lrz. 22 Aug 2007.
-
-Built on HP-UX 11i v3 (B.11.31 U ia64) with optimizing compiler, got tons of
-picky warnings, but it finished and linked and runs OK. Many of the
-warnings were like this:
-
- "ckucns.c", line 1606: warning #2068-D: integer conversion resulted in a
- change of sign: tnopt[0] = (CHAR) IAC;
-
-IAC is defined as 255 in ckctel.h. If I define it as 0xff, I don't get the
-warnings. I changed the definitions of all the Telnet commands to be in hex
-notation rather than decimal. If cuts way down on the HP-UX warnings and
-doesn't seem to cause problems elsewhere. ckctel.h, 23 Aug 2007.
-
-Now it looks like Solaris is working but then it hangs at the end. It
-appears as if the ckupty.c module is blocking SIGCHLD. Debug log shows that
-when the transfer is complete, we received IAC DM (Telnet Data Mark) after
-sz's last gasp and before the shell prompt is printed. But calling
-tn_doop() in this case is a mistake because we are reading the number of
-bytes that we know are available in a counted loop, but tn_doop() would
-consume an unknown number of bytes and we would never know when to exit the
-loop. Anyway, C-Kermit doesn't do anything with DM. Skipping over
-tn_doop() (and not writing out the Telnet command bytes) fixes the hanging
-condition at the end, even though SIGCHLD is never raised. ckutio.c,
-23 Aug 2007.
-
-Some tests, Solaris to NetBSD over K5.
-zst sends ascii.txt, a 2.36MB ascii text file (Kcps / Errors).
-zrt receives the same file:
-
- zst 587/0 526/0 542/0 434/0 423/0
- zrt 827/0 800/0 847/0 FAIL 610/0
-
-So text is good. Binary not so good. Here we transfer the 1MB all-bytes
-pattern file. zrb receives it successfully, but with 1248 errors, at only
-15Kcps. Sending the same file out always fails:
-
- Begin 20070823 16:32:07: SEND BINARY all2.bin [sz]
- Sending: all2.bin
- Bytes Sent: 5600/1000000 BPS:12446 ETA 01:19 FAILURE
- End 20070823 16:32:13
- Elapsed time: 6.617992999999842
- cps = 151103.2121067556
- lsz: caught signal 1; exiting
-
-Decided to move to Linux but found that something is screwed up in Linux
-C-Kermit with tilde expansion:
-
- send ~/testfiles/all.bin
-
-doesn't expand at all (but it did yesterday!). The problem was in the
-ancient, ancient realuid/setuid handling code; real_uid() no longer works in
-Linux. I worked around this in whoami() by setting ruid to getuid() if
-real_uid() returned a negative number. Maybe dangerous, worry about it
-later. ckufio.c, 23 Aug 2007.
-
-ANYWAY... after fixing that, I tested zsb on Linux, and it's broken there
-too, using openpty(), so it's nothing to do with ckupty.c. After sending
-the first Zmodem data packet, it just hangs, nothing comes back. In text
-mode it gets farther, but then the same thing happens. Captured stderr from
-rz on the far end:
-
- Bytes received: 608/1000000 BPS:21137 ETA 00:47 Retry 0: Bad CRC
- Bytes received: 864/1000000 BPS:23540 ETA 00:42 Retry 0: Bad CRC
- Bytes received: 1120/1000000 BPS:25003 ETA 00:39 Retry 0: Bad CRC
- Bytes received: 5696/1000000 BPS:56988 ETA 00:17 Retry 0: Bad CRC
- Bytes received: 9120/1000000 BPS:62227 ETA 00:15 Retry 0: Bad CRC
- Bytes received: 9376/1000000 BPS:60766 ETA 00:16 Retry 0: Bad CRC
- Bytes received: 9632/1000000 BPS:60361 ETA 00:16 Retry 0: Got TIMEOUT
- Retry 0: Sender Canceled
- Retry 0: Got ZCAN
-
-The local sz, however, doesn't give any error message. ZCAN means: "other
-end canceled session by sending 5 ^X's" (or user typed them). What actually
-happens is that ttptycmd()'s select() times out waiting for something from
-the Zmodem partner and ttptycmd() itself kills the sz fork with SIGHUP.
-When lsz receives SIGHUP it sends the ZCAN. So the real problem is that
-after some point we're not receiving anything.
-
-I changed the timeout from 4 seconds to 30 seconds and now I see it just
-stops for long periods of time and then resumes. The lrz log on the
-receiving end shows tons of timouts, CRC errors, and other errors. The
-local log shows that lsz wound up sending ZCAN (2 x (10 x ^H, 10 x ^X)).
-
-Moving on to another problem... Turns out Ctrl-C (SIGINT) is working right
-after all. Since I'm using my test scripts like kerbang scripts, Ctrl-C
-exits through trap(), as it should, closing the connection and cleaning up.
-If I start Kermit and tell it to TAKE the script, then Ctrl-C brings me back
-to the prompt with the connection still open (as it should). However, until
-now I haven't done anything about the fork or the ptys. Added code to
-trap() to kill the fork and close the master pty. ckuusx.c, 24 Aug 2007.
-
-Added code to try to break the deadlock. If select() times out, but we have
-stuff to write either to the pty or the net, try to do it anyway, even
-though select() did not say we could. But this doesn't help because when
-select() times out we don't have anything to write. The problem is that
-after receiving that last packet from the remote rz, the local lsz doesn't
-seem to do anything, as if the lower fork wasn't running (and to confirm
-this hypothesis, sometimes I noticed that when I Ctrl-C'd out of this, the
-transfer would take off again).
-
-Backing up and testing with gkermit rather than zmodem:
-
- kst ripple.txt [824K] OK
- kst ascii.txt [1359K] OK
- krt ripple.txt -- FAILED
-
-It seems that we can't handle streaming. If I set up krt to disable
-streaming on receipt, it works OK.
-
- krt ripple.txt [824K] OK
- krb all2.bin [1000K] OK
-
-So here we have no trouble sending but big trouble receiving unless we
-disable streaming. Whereas with Zmodem we have trouble receiving.
-
-But this wasn't happening before, what changed? Using C-Kermit on the far
-end to receive the file with debug log on, I see that it is sending 4K data
-packet after 4K data packet, with the local gkermit silent, as expected.
-About midway through the transfer, the local Kermit sends an error packet
-"Transmission error on reliable link". Looking at G-Kermit's debug log...
-It receives the first five 4K data packets OK, but gets a CRC error on the
-fifth one, and sends the Error packet. So it has received a stream of
-20-some thousand bytes OK and then messes up. That number sounds a lot like
-ttptycmd()'s buffer size. I changed the buffer sizes to be different:
-
- Read from pty and write to net: 4K
- Read from net and write to pty: 1K
-
-This time it received the first 4K packet and failed on the second one.
-Then I increased the buffers to 98K each, expecting to receive lots more
-packets successfully but it bombed out on the 5th one. But that's good, it
-confirms there's no logic error in the buffer management. Just to make
-sure, though, let's set the buffer size smaller than the packet size and
-disable streaming. In this case we get 4 good data packets and a CRC error
-on the 5th one and so we request retransmission, and the next 8 times it
-arrives it gets a different CRC error, but the 9th copy is OK. Then the
-next packet comes and it gets a CRC error every time. And this is nothing
-but plain ASCII text.
-
-Switching to remote mode:
-
- REMOTE=1 kk kst
-
-(after tricking myself because it was using ttruncmd() for this...) I see
-that nothing works at all. What did I break? 24 Aug 2007.
-
-Fixed ttptycmd() to restore console modes after a remote-mode transfer.
-ckutio.c, 25 Aug 2007.
-
-Noticed that error codes like ESRCH are not available in all modules.
-That's because of some complicated in #ifdefs in ckcdeb.h that wind up not
-always #including <errno.h>. But I notice that ckutio.c includes it
-unconditionally with no ill effects, and so does ckvfio.c. Does any version
-of Unix at all not have <errno.h>? Added a catch-all clause to ckcdeb.h to
-#include <errno.h> (in UNIX only) if, after the other clauses, ESRCH was
-still not defined. ckcdeb.h, 25 Aug 2007.
-
-Now back to debugging ttptycmd()... Remote-mode transfers with ttptycmd()
-were broken in two places, maybe as long as 2 weeks ago (this would have
-affected non-network transfers too, which I can't test any more).
-The logic was missing in a couple places for the non-network and/or
-non-Telnet and/or non-encrypting connections (if statements with no else
-parts). Fixed in ckutio.c, 25 Aug 2007.
-
-Testing remote mode:
-
- kst OK zst OK
- ksb OK zsb OK
- krt OK zrt OK
- krb OK zrb OK
-
-Functionally it all works but there are hitches with Zmodem as always.
-When sending to K95:
-
- . If I send with lsz, there are hundreds of "Subpacket too long" errors,
- and the transfer is very slow, but it succeeds.
-
- . If I send with the 1994 Omen version of sz, transmission is instantaneous
- and without errors, but then it hangs at the end.
-
- . If I bypass C-Kermit and send direct from lsz or sz, both work fine.
-
-So clearly the ptys are getting in the way. The hanging at the end would be
-caused by the sz process closing before its last output reached the master
-pty. It would need to do some form of flushing and/or pausing at the end
-but there's nothing I can do about that; these programs were not designed to
-be used in this way. Anyway, it only seems to happen with files longer than
-100K.
-
-For local mode, testing in Solaris over our Kerberos 5 connection again:
-
- gkermit lrzsz
- kst OK zst FAIL
- ksb OK zsb FAIL
- krt OK zrt OK but with errors
- krb OK zrb FAIL
-
-If I use Omen rzsz as the external protocol (e.g. with zst), it blocks
-redirection and it sends the file to my terminal, rather than over the
-connection. This would probably be because it finds out the device name of
-the job's controlling terminal and opens it, to prevent redirection. This
-is hard to prevent in Solaris because there is no TIOCSTTY ioctl().
-Supposedly the same thing is accomplished by closing and reopening the slave
-pty after doing setsid(). I added code to do this, but it made no
-difference. (If I use lsz instead of sz, it is indeed redirected, but jams
-up after about 15K.) ckupty.c, 27 Aug 2007.
-
-On Mac OS X with sz 3.73 1-30-03, however, the redirection works, so I
-assume it would also work in Linux, FreeBSD, NetBSD, etc, too. Doing the
-full test suite on Mac OS X:
-
- gkermit lrzsz rzsz
- kst OK zst FAIL (1) OK
- ksb OK zsb FAIL (2) OK
- krt OK zrt OK (3) OK for 100K file, fails for longer.
- krb OK zrb FAIL (4) OK (1MB all-bytes test pattern)
-
-(1) 64K file OK every time; 100K file fails every time.
-(2) 10K file fails every time.
-(3) Succeeds with 800K file but gets a few recoverable errors.
-(4) Succeeds with 48K binary file with some errors, fails with longer ones.
-
-So actually it looks pretty good, it's just that lrzsz messes up. When
-sending with lsz if I include -L 512 it sends the 100K test file with no
-errors, but still chokes on longer ones.
-
-Testing on Mac OS X again, but this time over a clear-text Telnet connection:
-
- gkermit lrzsz rzsz
- kst OK zst FAIL(1) OK
- ksb OK zsb FAIL(2) OK
- krt OK zrt OK(3) OK
- krb OK zrb FAIL(4) OK
-
-(1) Almost worked, finished 777K out of 824K without errors.
-(2) Got tons of errors, failed in first 30K out of 1000K.
-(3) OK for 100K file but fails for larger.
-(4) OK for 48K binary fail but fails for larger.
-
-Maybe see if we can do without the OPENPTY part.
-
-TOMORROW -- just clean up the code, add some SET / SHOW / HELP commands,
-document it, and move on.
-
-Note: In K95, SET WINDOW sets the Zmodem packet length, 32 - 1024, multiple
-of 64.
-
-SEE ~/80/external.txt
-
-Changed ftp port from int to unsigned int. ckcftp.c, 30 Aug 2007.
-
-Tried again to build KRB4/KRB5/SSL/TLS version for Solaris 9. Had to update
-the build procedure again, of course, because of new file and directory
-names, but ran into problems anyway because the
-cu-solaris9g+krb5+krb4+openssl+shadow+pam+zlib target was calling another
-target that did not know about the hardwired pathnames. Integrated the two
-targets and tried building again. It actually compiled ok (but with lots of
-warnings from the security modules), but failed at link time with
-krb5_init_ets not found; fixed that with an #ifdef NO_KRB5_INIT_ETS, now it
-builds OK but without the ftp client. Tried building it WITH the FTP and
-that was OK too, no changes needed except to the build procedure. 12 Feb
-2008, that is: C-Kermit 8.0.212 : 20080212.
-
-Tried to build with -DCK_SRP and -lsrp but:
-
- hash_supported ckcftp.o
- hash_getdescbyname ckcftp.o
- hash_getdescbyid ckcftp.o
- cipher_getdescbyname ckcftp.o
- krypto_delete ckcftp.o
- krypto_new ckcftp.o
- cipher_supported ckcftp.o
- krypto_msg_priv ckcftp.o
- krypto_msg_safe ckcftp.o
- hash_getlist ckcftp.o
- cipher_getlist ckcftp.o
- cipher_getdescbyid ckcftp.o
-
-Sent mail to Tom Wu and backed off for now. makefile, 14 Feb 2008.
-(Tom Wu never answered; seems like SRP is defunct.)
-
-The ".blah = xxx" form of variable assignment only worked for variables
-names of length 22 or less, noticed and fixed by Wolfram Sang. ckucmd.c,
-5 Mar 2008.
-
-In "set host /pty ssh ..." connections, the INPUT command suddenly stopped
-working. This is in Solaris 9. It happens with all 8.0.* versions of
-C-Kermit, so it's nothing to do with ttptycmd(). Added some debug()
-statements but they don't show anything. Turns out there wasn't a problem
-after all. Wed Mar 26 16:04:53 2008
-
-Changed cmifi() to not print "?No files match" (or whatever) if SET QUIET ON.
-ckucmd.c, 26 Mar 2008.
-
-Added \v(remoteip) for the IP address of the host we're connected to,
-and \v(inmessage) for INPUT status messages corresponding to \v(instatus).
-ckuusr.h, ckcmai.c, ckuus[24].c, 26 Mar 2008.
-
-Made \fkeywordval() strip braces/quotes from the right-hand side so we can
-handle things like:
-
- password="stringwithspaceatend "
-
-ckuus4.c, 6 Aug 2008.
-
-Added invisible PUTENV command for UNIX only. Value should not be enclosed
-in doublequotes. Requires lge \v(buildid) 20080826. ckuusr.[ch], 26 Aug 2008.
-
-Added SET VARIABLE-EVALUATION { RECURSIVE, SIMPLE }. This is highly
-experimental, but also highly desirable if it works out. SIMPLE inhibits
-the default recursive method of evaluating \%x and \&x[] variables, which
-is, quite frankly, nuts and makes programming in Kermit at best
-counterintuitive. I made an exception in the case of array subscripts,
-because changing how they are evaluated could break a lot of scripts, and
-anyway there should never be any harm in evaluating them recursively because
-their final value is always (or should be) numeric, not some string that
-might contain backslashes. The SET VAR setting is on the stack, just like
-SET QUIET (it follows the quiet/xquiet code in ckuus[356].c), so macros or
-command files that change it can't break the script that invokes them.
-Added \frecurse() to force recursive evaluation of a \%x or \&x[] variable
-regardless of the VARIABLE-EVALUATION setting. Added \v(vareval) to allow
-programmatic setting to current setting. Tested on Solaris 9 but should be
-totally portable. ckuusr.[ch], ckuus[356].c, 11 Sep 2008.
-
-From Günter Knauf: 64-bit builds were failing on SuSE Linux because
-libresolv and libcrypt were in lib64 rather than lib; updated the tests in
-the linux makefile target to find them. makefile, 12 Jan 2009.
-
-Tried building on Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server release 5.3 64-bit.
-There is no curses or ncurses. "make linuxnc" compiled OK but collapsed at
-link time looking for crypt(), res_search(), and dn_expand(). Turned out
-the linuxnc (and linuxc) targets needed the same treatment as the Linux one
-for 64-bit Linuxes. makefile, 3 Mar 2009.
-
-Consolidated the linux targets so we no longer need three separate ones for
-curses, ncurses, and no curses. "make linux" works ok on computers with and
-without (n)curses. "make linux+ssl", ditto. "linux+krb5+ssl builds OK but
-needs -DNO_KRB5_INIT_ETS". Makefile, 3 Mar 2009.
-
-Fixed copyright date announced in herald, ckuus5.c, 3 Mar 2009.
-
-Patch from Seth Therault to avoid deprecation warning for utmp references
-in ckufio.c in Mac OS X 10.5 (later, this became a consolidated makefile
-target that works automatically for at least Mac OS X 10.3.9 through
-10.5.6). makefile, ckufio.c, 28 April 2009.
-
-zshcmd() (the function used by RUN and ! to run external commands) was not
-falling back as expected in Linux RHEL4/5 if SHELL was not defined in the
-environment. Also in all Unix versions, there was no indication if a RUN/!
-command failed (other than the return code) because the specified shell
-didn't exist or was not executable (e.g. the SHELL environment variable was
-misdefined). Now it prints the name of the offending shell and the reason
-it couldn't be executed (Not found, Permission denied, etc). ckufio.c,
-28 April 2009.
-
-There is no easy way to get the last field of string; for example, the
-extension from a filename, which might have any number of fields. In
-general we want to be able to get "word number n" counting from the right;
-\fword() lacks this ability. Now if you give it a negative word number,
-that says to count from the right; for example \fword(one two three four
-five, -2) returns "four". ckclib.c, ckuusr.c, 14 May 2009.
-
-Fixed a typo in the aix51+openssl (SSLLIBS should have been SSLLIB).
-From Jason Lehr. makefile, 27 May 2009.
-
-Updated the linux+openssl+zlib+shadow+pam target to chain to the new main
-Linux target. A bunch of other ones remain un-updated. makefile, 12 Jun 2009.
-
-Updates to the new Mac OS X 10.5 target from Seth Therault (which is
-supposed to work on all Mac OS 10-point-anything) to avoid warnings
-that came up on on Mac OS 10.4.11/Intel. Once this one is proven we should
-be able to remove/consolidate lots of other ones. makefile, 12 Jun 2009.
-
-C-Kermit disables SSL with the message "?OpenSSL libraries do not match
-required version." if the version of OpenSSL that Kermit was built with is
-not exactly the same as the version that is loaded dynamically at runtime.
-This is actually the proper behavior, since APIs are not guaranteed not to
-change between OpenSSL versions prior to 1.0.0. Made the error message more
-informative. ck_ssl.c, 26 Aug 2009, and again 28 Aug 2009.
-
-AIX 6.1 is out, it is really just a new name for AIX 5.4. Added makefile
-targets, plus for the first I made AIX 4.2 and later figure out its version
-number in the makefile target so we don't have to keep adding new -DAIXnn
-sections to the code, and also get its hardware name (e.g. "powerpc") from
-uname at make time, rather than hardwiring "rs6000" as I did before.
-Consolidated all AIX 4.2 and later targets so now just "make aix" or "make
-aix+ssl" can be used. Except not the gcc ones as they have some quirks so
-I'd rather not disturb them. Tested this on AIX 5.3.
-makefile, 28 Aug 2009.
-
-From Kinjal Shah, a correction to the Linux makefile entry that allows it
-find the 64-bit curses or ncurses library. makefile, 29 Aug 2009.
-
-Renamed aix4[23]: to oldaix4[23]: in makefile to fix the warning messages
-I didn't notice before. I didn't want to remove them because they have
-some special things that might still be needed, if anybody still has these
-AIX versions. makefile, 29 Aug 2009.
-
-Built on RHEL 5.3 64-bit, regular and with OpenSSL 0.9.8e. 31 Aug 2009.
-
-Built on NetBSD 5.0.1/i386, regular and with OpenSSL 0.9.9-dev, 1 Sep 2009.
-
-Changed SSL message to mention LD_LIBRARY_PATH (Solaris), SHLIB_PATH (HP-UX),
-LIBPATH (AIX), or LD_LIBRARY_PATH (Linux). ck_ssl.c, 3 Sep 2009
-
-Noticed that "make linux+openssl" fails to include -lutil a link time, which
-it needs for openpty(). That's because this target is obsolete. I renamed
-it to be oldlinux+openssl and added linux+openssl as a synonym for
-linux+ssl. makefile, 3 Sep 2009.
-
-Tested linux+openssl+zlib+shadow+pam, it's OK. Also linux+krb5. Also
-linux+krb5+ssl. makefile, 3 Sep 2009.
-
-Tried building on Solaris 9 with OpenSSL 0.9.8k with
-solaris9g+openssl+shadow+pam+zlib, it failed like so:
-
- ck_ssl.c:2875: error: conflicting types for 'inet_aton'
- /usr/include/arpa/inet.h:52: previous declaration of 'inet_aton' was here
- make[2]: [ck_ssl.o] Error 1
- make[2]: Leaving directory hmt/sirius1/prv0/kd/fdc/solaris9ssl'
- make[1]: [solaris2xg+openssl+zlib+pam+shadow] Error 2
- make[1]: Leaving directory hmt/sirius1/prv0/kd/fdc/solaris9ssl'
- make: [solaris9g+openssl+shadow+pam+zlib] Error 2
-
-The problem was caused by including an inet_aton() function ck_ssl.c for
-the benefit of platforms that don't have one in their libraries. This is
-defeated by including NO_DCL_INET_ATON in KFLAGS. I added this, but then
-I thought it would be a good idea to automatically sense the OpenSSL
-version so we can automatically set OPENSSL_097 or OPENSSL_098 rather than
-bombing out, so I added code to do that too, and also to set the Solaris
-version number: 9, 10, or 11. The new entry is solaris9g+openssl.
-ckcdeb.h, makefile, 3 Sep 2009.
-
-Fixed a complaint in ckufio.c about implicit declaration of initgroups.
-ckufio.c, 4 Sep 2009.
-
-Built on Solaris 10 with gcc and Sun CC using new solaris{9,10,11} target
-that is like the new solaris{9,10,11}g one but without the gccisms.
-makefile, 4 Sep 2009.
-
-Changed solaris{9,10,11}g+ssl target to set only the SSL-specific things and
-then chain to the main solaris{9,10,11}g target. Tested OK on Solaris 9 and
-10. makefile, 4 Sep 2009.
-
-Created solaris{9,10,11}+ssl target that is exactly like the
-solaris{9,10,11}g+ssl except it chains to the solaris{9,10,11} target
-instead of the solaris{9,10,11}g one. That is, it builds an SSL version of
-C-Kermit using Sun CC rather than gcc. makefile, 4 Sep 2009.
-
-Tried building on HP-UX 10.20, bundled (non-ANSI) compiler ("make
-hpux1000"). This failed until I:
-
- . Moved a struct inititialization out of setextern(), ckuus3.c.
- . Removed an ANSIism from the declaration of sigchld_handler() in ckutio.c
- . Added a cast to strcmp() in zvuser(), ckufio.c.
-
-Builds OK now. Built OK with "hpux1000o" (the ANSI compiler) too.
-And with "hpux1000gcc". Couldn't test "hpux1000o+openssl". 21 Sep 2009.
-
-The Sony Playstation 2 and 3 are 64-bit PowerPC platforms that can run Linux
-if it is installed as an "other OS" on its hard disk; and the Linux kernel
-since 2.6.21 supports the PS3 without any patching required. Pawel Rogocz
-reported that "make linuxppc" (one of the old targets that has not yet been
-integrated into the main "linux" target) compiles OK on 2.6.29-ydl61.3
-(Yellow Dog Linux release 6.2 'Pyxis'), but fails at link time because
-'openpty' isn't found, because -lutil was not included, because that part
-was added only to the main linux target. I asked him to try "make linux"
-and he sent back a transcript in which there were thousands of errors from
-the curses code ckuusx.c. Later I tried it myself and it built without a
-hitch. My theory is that between then and now, a missing piece of the
-ncurses library (/usr/include/ncursesw) was installed. 21 Sep 2009.
-
-HP-UX 9.05 on PA-RISC 9000/712 building with hpux0900 (bundled compiler):
- . ckutio.c compilation failed with PENDIN and FLUSHO not defined in
- pty_make_raw(). I dummied definitions for them to handle this situation
- on this or any other platform where it might crop up.
- ckutio.c, 24 Sep 2009.
- . Ditto for the PTY module, + IMAXBEL. ckupty.c, 24 Sep 2009.
- . References to endusershell() were fatal in the bundled compiler. Changed
- the hpux0900 target to define NODCLENDUSERSHELL, and put a special case
- in ckufio.c to not put a cast in front of the call if NODCLENDUSERSHELL
- is defined. Now it builds and links OK. makefile, ckufio.c, 24 Sep 2009.
-
-HP-UX 9.05 on PA-RISC 9000/712 building with hpux0900o (optimizing compiler):
- . Warnings in ckutio.c at line 14860 about arguments to select (pointers
- are not assignment-compatible). "man select" says arguments are ints.
- Defining INTSELECT fixes these warnings but results in fatal errors later
- around line 14881 and others in the area involving FD_SET. This was too
- involved so I put it back as it was. 24 Sep 2009.
-
-Built OK on Solaris 10 with Sun CC. A couple warnings about implicit
-function declarations for curses routines because apparently they aren't
-declared in curses.h. Tuff. 25 Sep 2009.
-
-Tried building on Solaris 10 with Sun CC and OpenSSL 0.9.8k, and this
-uncovered various loose ends in the solaris9+openssl target, which I fixed.
-makefile, 25 Sep 2005.
-
-Fixed four typos in printfs in ck_ssl.c, \% instead of just %. 25 Sep 2009.
-
-Squelched 20-some complaints about a character array being referred to
-directly instead of by a pointer, plus several other similar nits to get rid
-of all the compilation warnings on Solaris 10 with Sun C 5.8 Patch 121015-06
-2007/10/03. ckctel.c, ckctel.h, 25 Sep 2009.
-
-Built the result on the same Solaris 10 system with gcc 4.2.4 using the
-new solari10g+openssl target, working out a few kinks here too.
-makefile, 25 Sep 2009.
-
-Made consolidated Solaris 9/10/11 64-bit targets for gcc, solaris9g64,
-solaris10g64, solaris11g64, tested on Solaris 10 Sparc. makefile, 25 Sep 2009.
-
-Made consolidated Solaris 9/10/11 64-bit targets for Sun cc: solaris9_64,
-solaris10_64, solaris11_64. These simply set a couple flags and chain to
-the main solaris9 target. makefile, 25 Sep 2009.
-
-Removed a bunch of old superfluous Solaris 9 and 10 targets: oldsolaris9,
-oldsolaris9lfs, solaris9g64 solaris9g_64, oldsolaris10 old solaris10lfs,
-oldsolaris10+openssl, oldsolaris10g+openssl, solaris10_64, oldsolaris10g,
-solaris10g_64, solaris10g64. There are still plenty more to prune but it's
-a start. makefile, 25 Sep 2009.
-
-Added or fixed some missing prototypes in ckctel.h:
-fwdx_send_xauth_to_xserver(), fwdx_parse_displayname. 25 Sep 2009.
-
-Improved the instructions for building secure versions in the makefile,
-using this example:
-
- make solaris9+openssl "SSLINC=-I/opt/openssl-0.9.8k/include" \
- "SSLLIB=-L/opt/openssl-0.9.8k/lib"
-
-makefile, http://kermit.columbia.edu/security.html, 25 Sep 2009.
-
-Built on HP-UX 11.11, 26 Sep 2009:
- . make hpux1100 (ok)
- . make hpux1100gcc (ok)
- . make hpux1100o (gets a lot of warnings about sendpath and sendfile,
- because they are also declared in <sys/socket.h>, but builds OK)
- . make hpux1000gcc+openssl \
- SSLINC=-I/opt/openssl/include SSLLIB=-L/opt/openssl/lib
-
-Note: sendpath and sendfile are not Kermit symbols. The warnings are coming
-from socket.h: 'Redeclaration of "sendfile" with a different storage class
-specifier'. This is nothing new; see notes of 2-4 Jan 2005.
-
-From Peter Eichhorn:
- . Update to makefile to make current code build OK on HP-UX 8.00.
- . Changes to format of some hints to make them more copy-and-pastable.
-makefile, ckuu5.c, 28 Sep 2009.
-
-From Peter Eichhorn: Changes to HP-UX 7.0 target to increase the switch table
-stack size, which was overflowing. makefile, 30 Sep 2009
-
-HP-UX 6.5 (1989), "make hpux0650tcpc"... (8:19...) Needed to not include
-arpa/inet.h (which doesn't exist) and not use host address lists (add
--DNOHADDRLIST), which gets us past ckcnet.c, but in ckcftp.c we bomb out on
-FD_SETSIZE undefined. Somehow we worked around this in ckcnet.c. Patched
-in a definition in ckcftp.c, and also added -DINTSELECT to compiler flags.
-Compiles ok, bombs at link time on bcopy, bzero, FD_ZERO, FD_SET, FD_ISSET.
-Now it compiles and links OK but dumps core when started. Added
--DNOCKGETFQHOST, rebuilt from scratch (takes 35 minutes). It starts OK, but
-it dumps core when given a "telnet xxx" command, where xxx is a hostname.
-However, it works OK if an IP address is used: "telnet 123.45.6.78". It
-took all day to track this down, but now it's fixed (see the #ifdef HPUX6
-sections of ckcnet.c). So now (for the first time, I think) we have both
-telnet and ftp in HP-UX 6.x, if anyone cares. ckcnet.[ch], ckcftp.c,
-makefile, 2 Oct 2009.
-
-Changed default SET TERMINAL TYPE type for K95 from vt320 to vt220. This is
-because Unix OS's such as Solaris have dropped vt320 as a terminal type.
-settrmtyp(), ckuus7.c, 5 Oct 2009.
-
-I moved the PUTENV command code, which was inline, to a function, doputenv().
-ckuus[r7].c, ckuusr.h, 5 Oct 2009.
-
-Changed the UNIX version of SET TERMINAL TYPE to take a value and then do
-the equivalent of "export TERM=value" by calling doputenv(). This sets
-\$(TERM) correctly and passes its value along to inferior processes.
-However, to make this take effect within Kermit itself (for the fullscreen
-file transfer display and for the SCREEN command, Ctrl-L, etc) I also had to
-reinitialize the curses database, which is tricky because normally if you
-feed it an unknown terminal name, it just exits. ckuus7.c, 5 Oct 2009.
-
-Changed the little-known and little-used RESET command (which closes all
-open files) to also put command echoing back to normal in case it got
-messed up somehow (as in HP-UX 6.5, upon returning from PUSH).
-ckuusx.c, 5 Oct 2009.
-
-For Unix, increased string buffer sizes for wildcard expansion for all
-platforms that have BIGBUFOK defined from 500000 (0.5M) to 10000000 (10M)
-bytes, and for 64-bit builds to 2000000000 (2G) bytes. No point making
-it bigger than that because malloc's argument is a size_t, which is an int.
-ckufio.c, 5 Oct 2009.
-
-Built on Mac OS X 10.4.11, required one minor adjustment to the makefile
-(-DNODCLINITGROUPS). This was using the macosx10.5 target, which is
-supposed to be universal like the linux and netbsd targets, but not yet
-proven. Also built a 64-bit version (-mpowerpc64 -mcpu=G5 -mtune=G5
--arch ppc64); it compiles and links OK but won't start: "Bad CPU Type
-in executable". Fix later... makefile, 5 Oct 2009.
-
-Changes from Seth Theriault to suppress signed vs unsigned char warnings in
-Mac OS 10.5.8 from gcc4, and a new makefile target for Mac OS X (presumably
-10.3.9 or later) + Kerberos 5 and OpenSSL. ckutio.c, ckuath.c, ckctel.c,
-ckcnet.c, ckcftp.c, ck_crp.c, makefile, 6 Oct 2009.
-
- Later I had to back out of these, because although it made for a
- clean build, in the resulting executable SSL connections didn't work.
-
-Tue Oct 6 17:23:27 2009
-FTP address resolution is broken, but ftp_hookup() hasn't changed.
-So... (see the #ifdef HPUX6 sections of ckcnet.c) (I did, and I rolled
-back some of the changes from the other day, but it made no difference.)
-Putting back the ckcftp.c from a few weeks ago makes no difference.
-Putting back the ckcnet.c from a few weeks ago makes no difference.
-
-Added patches from Seth Theriault so macosx10.5+krb5+openssl would build
-on Mac OS X 10.3.9. makefile, ckcftp.c, 7 Oct 2009.
-
-Built today's code on Linux RHEL4, NetBSD 5.0.1, Solaris 9, and Mac OS X
-10.4.11, both with and without SSL. The NetBSD system has OpenSSL 0.9.9-dev.
-7 Oct 2009.
-
-In Mac OS X 10.6, the following symbols are unresolved at link time:
-_des_key_sched, _des_new_random_key, _des_ecb_encrypt,
-_des_init_random_number_generator, _des_fixup_key_parity. This is
-with OpenSSL 0.9.8k. But it doesn't happen on other platforms that
-have 0.9.8k.
-
-Added SET SESSION-LOG NULL-TERMINATED-TEXT. This is for the benefit of a
-speech synthesizer that will speak a line of text only after receiving a
-NUL character. A more general solution would be to define a filter or
-whatever, but who has time. ckuus[23x].c, 7 Oct 2009.
-
-Consolidated Mac OS X targets, and removed experimental 64-bit ones, because
-they never could work in 10.5 and earlier because 64-bit libs are missing,
-and 10.6 and later are 64-bit automatically. makefile, 8 Oct 2009.
-
-Built on Mac OS X 10.6.1. It came out automatically as a 64-bit build
-because __LP64__ is defined somewhere that I can't find. But this explains
-why the 0.9.8k on 10.6 comes up with missing symbols when the 0.9.8k lib
-10.5 (or on Solaris or on Linux) does not: it's a different library: "Mach-O
-64-bit dynamically linked shared library x86_64", rather than "Mach-O
-dynamically linked shared library ppc". Probably the 64-bit version has
-some things #ifdef'd out. Added -m32 to the CFLAGS and LNKFLAGS for the
-macosx+krb5+openssl targets, and it built OK one time. But then the errors
-came back. makefile, 8 Oct 2009.
-
-Updated C-Kermit installation for Mac OS X in ckuwr.html on the website.
-8 Oct 2009.
-
-Tried some things to get around the problem with OpenSSL in Mac OS X 10.6,
-to no avail. Asked Jeff. He said, "MacOS X no longer includes DES anywhere
-on the system. Not for SSL, not for Kerberos, not for anything. This will
-increasingly become the situation on new operating systems. Windows 7 and
-2008 R2 will also ship with no DES." Sure enough, the Mac OS X Server
-Upgrading and Migrating document for 10.6 says, "Mac OS X Server v10.6 does
-not support single DES encryption. It supports AES 128 and 256 encryption
-types. However, during a migration or upgrade from v10.4 to v10.6, servers
-that were Kerberized by the v10.5 Open Directory server will not use the AES
-128 or 256 encryption types. To use the AES 128 or 256 encryption types you
-must re-Kerberize all servers." 12 Oct 2009.
-
-DES and 3DES encryption can be excluding removing the -DCK_DES flag. I
-removed this one and -DLIBDES (and -m32) and this makes a working 64-bit
-version. Then I added code to the macosx+krb5+openssl target to use these
-flags if the Mac OS X version was 10.5 or less and leave them out for 10.6
-or later. Tested on 10.4.11 and 10.6.1. A better way to do it might have
-been "nm -gj libssl.dylib | grep des_", but that gives the same results on
-10.4 and 10.6. Also, 10.6 still has /usr/include/ssl/des.h.
-makefile, 13 Oct 2009.
-
-Next issue:
- In file included from ckutio.c:15674:
- /usr/lib/gcc/i386-redhat-linux/3.4.6/include/varargs.h:4:2: #error "GCC no
- longer implements <varargs.h>."
- /usr/lib/gcc/i386-redhat-linux/3.4.6/include/varargs.h:5:2: #error "Revise
- your code to use <stdarg.h>."
-
-The problem occurs when trying to force a non-ANSIC build with GCC.
-Changing the source file to include <stdarg.h> instead of <varargs.h>
-doesn't help because evidently <stdarg.h> requires an ANSI C compiler.
-Nothing can be done about this. 13 Oct 2009.
-
-Next issue: Can't compile ckcftp.c with -DNOCSETS or -DNOSPL; some
-#ifdef/#endif doesn't match up. Sigh, this is the hardest kind of thing to
-debug. There's 17,622 lines of code in this module and no tool that I know
-of.... Wait, I wrote one. But it shows all the #if/#ifdef/#ifndef's and
-#endifs matching up just fine. Backing off to ckcftp.c of a few days ago
-(before char / unsigned char casts were added), I see that it builds OK, so
-I backed off to that one, but put back the special case #ifdef for MACOSX103
-declaring CONST gss_OID_desc, and it builds OK (the other stuff was purely
-cosmetic, when will I learn?). ckcftp.c, 13 Oct 2009.
-
-Protected cvtstring() and related functions with #ifdef NOCSETS..#endif,
-and ditto for the character-set conversion code in dorename().
-ckuus6.c, 13 Oct 2009.
-
-Fixed an #endif /* TNCODE */ that was a line too low in ttptycmd(),
-causing -DNONET builds to fail. ckutio.c, 13 Oct 2009.
-
-There was a reference to doputenv() that wasn't guarded by #ifndef NOPUTENV,
-fixed in ckuus7.c, 13 Oct 2009.
-
-Moved doputenv() and settermtyp() out of an #ifdef NOLOCAL section because
-these are useful even when not making connections. ckuus7.c, 13 Oct 2009.
-
-Moved havelfs declaration outside of #ifdef NOXFER because it was also used
-for other things. ckcmai.c, 13 Oct 2009.
-
-COPY /PRESERVE depended on code from the Kermit protocol module, which
-is omitted in -DNOXFER builds. Disabled COPY /PRESERVE in -DNOXFER
-builds. ckuus6.c, 14 Oct 2009.
-
-SHOW PROTOCOL code for external protocols had to be #ifdef'd out for
--DNOPUSH builds. ckuus4.c, 14 Oct 2009.
-
-There was some confusion between "No XYZMODEM" and "No extermal protocols";
-cleared up in ckuus3.c, 14 Oct 2009.
-
-After all that, 86 different combinations of feature selections built OK on
-Linux. And the Kerberized version (K5) works OK on Linux for Telnet and FTP.
-14 Oct 2009.
-
-Changed version number to 9.0. All modules, 16 Oct 2009.
-
-Need to make LOG SESSION log to a tty. Right now "log session
-/dev/ttyKeySerial1" says "Write permission denied" even though the device is
-crw-rw-rw-. This happens in zchko(), which is called by cmofi(). The
-problem is that /dev/ is not writeable. I added a Unix-only clause that
-attempts to open the file for write access using open(), in order to get a
-file descriptor, which then can be passed to isatty() to check if it's a
-tty, and if so, to allow access. And then close it. I tested this on Mac
-OS X as follows:
-
- log session /dev/ttyKeySerial1
- telnet somehost
-
-The Mac's serial port was connected to the serial port of another computer
-where Kermit displayed the incoming characters in CONNECT mode. Glitches:
-
- 1. The port has to be set up as desired in advance, outside of Kermit.
- 2. log session /dev/ttyKeySerial1 will hang if any required modem signals
- are not present when the port is opened.
- 3. Bypasses lockfile mechanism - so we do this only if -DNOUUCP.
-
-For (2), I tried setting O_NDELAY / O_NONBLOCK, and this allowed zchko() to
-continue, but then it freezes in the subsequent fopen(). So I changed
-zopeno() to also check if the device is a serial port, and if so, to open()
-it with O_NDELAY / O_NONBLOCK, and then convert the file descriptor into a
-file pointer with fdopen().
-
-Now for the speaking device that needs lines to be terminated by NUL...
-
- set session-log binary <-- need to put these in SHOW LOG
- set session-log null-padded (and in HELP SET LOG)
- set line /dev/ttyKeySerial1
-
-This part works.
-
-This feature is enabled only for -DNOUUCP builds because serial ports aren't
-like other Unix files; we would have to create a lockfile, but we can't do
-that... actually, ttlock() takes a name as an argument, but ttunlck() does
-not, so there would be no way to remove the lock. Anyway, there is only one
-API for configuring the port (speed, flow control, etc) and it only works
-with the SET LINE device, not any random file. To fix this would require
-massive redesign and changes. ckuus[23].c, ckufio.c, 19-20 Oct 2009.
-
-I made -DNOUUCP the default for Mac OS X, since everybody winds up building
-it that way anyhow. To undo this, do "make macosx KFLAGS=-UNOUUCP".
-makefile, 21 Oct 2009.
-
-Changed SET SESSION-LOG TEXT to strip out ANSI escape sequences;
-previously there wasn't that much difference between TEXT and BINARY logs.
-It's still not perfect; for example it doesn't delete characters that the
-user erased. (Made sure this still builds with -DNOESCSEQ.)
-ckucns.c, 22 Oct 2009.
-
-Changed SHOW LOG to show the SET SESSION-LOG settings, as well as
-SET DEBUG, which was not shown before. ckuus5.c, 22 Oct 2009.
-
-If a series of PUTENV commands is given, each new one undoes the previous
-one, so only the last definition is seen by the new fork (or by Kermit
-itself). Turns out you can't feed automatic variables to putenv(); they
-have to be static, so to allow for multiple PUTENV commands Kermit has to
-maintain an array of static strings. ckuus7.c, 6 Nov 2009.
-
-From Seth Theriault, a better way for the makefile to determine the
-Mac OS X version number; there's a program for this, sw_ver. makefile,
-6 Nov 2009.
-
-Peter Eichhorn reported that file-transfer failure hints were not coming
-out since Dev.27. The only change I made since then was to skip them if
-the file-transfer protocol was not Kermit. I was using the wrong variable
-in the tests, 'proto' instead of 'protocol'. ckuus5.c, 6 Nov 2009.
-
-Changed Mac OS X targets to correctly extract the Mac OS major version
-from uname -r in order to choose correctly between utmp and utmpx; this
-wasn't working in 10.6.1. makefile, 6 Nov 2009.
-
-Fix from Seth T. for an oversight in the previous edit. Also add
-MACOSX103 to "show features" display. makefile, ckuus5.c, 10 Nov 2009.
-
-Added REJECT as a synonym for DISCARD in SET FILE COLLISION; it's more
-intuitive and more accurate. ckuus[27].c, 15 Nov 2009.
-
-\fsplit() and \fword() always break on 8-bit characters unless you explicitly
-put every single 8-bit value into the include set, e.g. (for a TSV file):
-
- undef include
- for \%i 128 255 1 {
- if == \%i 9 continue
- .include := \m(include)\fchar(\%i)
- }
- .\%n := \fsplit(\m(line),&a,\9,\m(include))
-
-I changed cksplit() to treat all 8-bit bytes 128-255 as non-break characters
-by default. It might have made more sense to do this for 160-255 (since
-128-159 are traditionaly C1 control characters) but thanks to Microsoft
-tradition is out the window. To treat one or more 8-bit characters as break
-characters, put them in the break set. This might break some scripts, but I
-doubt it because this flaw was so awful that if anyone had come up against
-they would have let me know. ckclib.c, 16 Nov 2009.
-
-Changed the netbsd target to set -funsigned-char, since cc on NetBSD is
-actually gcc. makefile, 16 Nov 2009.
-
-Changed macosx targets to get the CPU type from the HOSTTYPE environment
-variable. Also added getenv("HOSTTYPE") as a last-resort method to set the
-\v(cpu) variable at runtime (maybe it should be the first resort?)...
-ckuus4.c, makefile, 16 Nov 2009.
-
-Made sure the solaris9_64 and solaris10 targets still work. 16 Nov 2009.
-
-Made sure the current source package builds OK on HP-UX 10.20... Got a lot
-of "warning 6062: Optdriver: Exceeding compiler resource limits in xxx; some
-optimizations skipped. Use +Onolimit if override desired" but it builds OK.
-Tested long file transfer; works OK. 17 Nov 2009.
-
-Built on FreeBSD 7.2 with and without OpenSSL, all OK. 17 Nov 2009.
-
-Built on NetBSD 5.0.1 with and without OpenSSL, all OK, but netbsd+krb5
-fails with "can't find -lgssapi_krb5"; worked around this with
-"K5LIB=-L/usr/local/kerblib" (where the lib actually is on this host) but
-then it failed with "ckcftp.c:13868: error: 'gss_nt_service_name' undeclared".
-17 Nov 2009.
-
-I found a VMS 6.2 system... Takes a loooong time to build there. In
-ckuusy.c, DEC C didn't like the prototypes and declarations of dorlgarg()
-and dotnarg() as static so I made them not static. But that didn't help,
-now it fails at the very end, saying the final #ifdef is an invalid
-statement. It looks like an #ifdef mismatch that affects only VMS. I ran
-my #ifdef matcher, it turned up nothing. I substituted a copy of ckuusy.c
-from 2007, it comes up with the same errors. Then I substituted the copy
-from 8.0.211 from 2004, and this one compiled OK and, miraculously, the
-whole mess even linked OK and runs OK. The Alpha binary is 2.84MB. Now I
-have 4500 lines of code to compare.... I went through the two files line by
-line and I can't see a single thing wrong. I gave up and tried building the
-TCP/IP version. It builds fine except for ckuusy.c, with the utterly
-useless error message:
-
- #endif /* NOCMDL */
- ...................^
- %CC-E-BADSTMT, Invalid statement.
-
-Indicating the last line in the file. Just for the heck of it, I put
-another line after that one:
-
- /* This is a test */
-
-and got:
-
- /* This is a test */
- ....................^
- %CC-E-BADSTMT, Invalid statement.
-
-So it is not objecting to anything in the file. Trying the old LISP trick,
-I put an extraneous closing bracket after that. Success! Honestly, I don't
-see anything wrong with file. It's DEC C V5.3-006. I suspect a C bug.
-I'll leave it like this for now until I get access to some other VMS
-versions. Another clue is that when building the network version I get a
-horrible warning I never saw before from a module that hasn't been touched
-in a very long time (ckvrtl.c). Also, in the network version, I note that
-the FTP code is not compiled in. We have to try this again with some
-command-line switches, but it'll do for now. ckuusy.c, 18 Nov 2009.
-
----C-Kermit 9.0 Alpha.01---
-
-From Steven Schweda (SMS), the real solution for the VMS closing brace
-problem, it wasn't a DECC bug, it was a me bug. ckuusy.c, 20 Nov 2009.
-
-Rediscovered the new VMS build options: f for Long Files, i for Internal
-FTP. "make mnf" doesn't work on VMS 6.2, it looks like the VMS definition
-for CK_OFF_T got lost. Same thing with "make mfi". Come back to this later.
-
-From Gerry Belanger, a fix to INPUT /COUNT:n. ckuus4.c, 26 Nov 2009.
-
-Added \fsqueeze(s), returns string s with leading and trailing whitespace
-removed, Tabs converted to Spaces, and multiple spaces converted to single
-spaces. For now, ASCII only, no options. ckuusr.h, ckuus[24].c, 27 Nov 2009.
-
-I wrote a Kermit script to read a big file of addresses on Solaris 9,
-\fsqueeze()ing each line. After about 14000 lines, there was a malloc
-failure in getnct() (the command-file reader). There's nothing wrong with
-\fsqueeze(), the failure is on a deeper level, because the same thing
-happens if I use \fupper() (which is structurally identical to \fsqueeze())
-in the same script. The problem is not in getnct() either, because every
-malloc() is freed (I checked). On the other hand, the same script (with
-\fupper() instead of \fsqueeze() completes OK in C-Kermit 8.0.201. If I
-remove the function call (\fsqueeze() or \fupper()) from the script, it also
-runs OK in 9.0. This seems to point the finger at fnevel(), which contains
-countless malloc's and free's. But comparing fneval() between 8.0.211 and
-9.0, I don't see any difference that would explain this behavior -- nothing
-at all that involves malloc(), makstr(), or free(). Nor any pertinent
-change in the caller (zzstring) of fneval(). 27 Nov 3009.
-
-Another problem is that when this happens, the error is not caught (e.g. by
-the IF FAIL statement after the command that contains the function call);
-instead, C-Kermit returns immediately to its prompt. 27 Nov 2009.
-
-It could simply be that some of the buffers we allocate are much bigger now.
-But again, I don't see much difference between 8.0.211 and 9.0; we were
-already allocating 32K command-related buffers (malloc() takes a size_t, and
-size_t is an int almost everywere). I built the same source on NetBSD and
-ran the same script (with \fqueeze()), and it worked fine. Let's worry
-about this later, if it comes up. 27 Nov 2009.
-
-Built OK on Silicon Graphics IRIX 6.5 R10000; regular build OK, SSL and
-Kerberos builds failed. 30 Nov 3009.
-
-Tried to build on Digital Unix 4.0F but it blew up in ckutio.c, apparently
-not recognizing any of the terminal struct symbols from termios.h. Tried
-again with gcc, same thing. Tried explicitly #including <sys/termios.h>
-within #ifdef TRU64, same thing. What could have changed? 30 Nov 2009.
-
-Built OK on Linux RHEL5.4/Itanium-2, make linux. The secure build
-required "FLAGS=-DNO_KRB5_INIT_ETS" and built OK. 30 Nov 2009.
-
-Built OK on Digital Unix 4.0F using "make osf" instead of "make tru64-40f".
-I don't know why the specific target doesn't work, but it's not worth
-chasing down. 2 Dec 2009.
-
-Built OK on MirBSD 10, despite a lot of gratuitous compiler warnings. Built
-OK on MirBSD 10, OpenBSD 4.5, and Fedora 10. 3 Dec 2009.
-
-(Various other successful Unix builds in these weeks...)
-
-Built on VMS 7.2 and 8.3 with and without TCP/IP, no problems. 11 Jan 2010.
-
-Built on VMS 8.3 with "make fi" to include the FTP client and long-file
-support (mid Jan 2010).
-
-Built on VMS 8.3 with UXC 5.6 and HP SSL 1.3, which is OpenSSL 0.9.7e.
-It compiled and linked OK but when I tried to make an FTP SSL connection
-it crashed in SSL$LIBSSL_SHR, which is called from ssl_auth(), after having
-had TLS accepted as an authentication type, but before actually
-authenticating. In Unix:
-
- 19. ftp open ftp.somecompany.com /user:pge.com/test_quota /password:xxxxxx
-Connected to ftp.somecompany.com.
-220-Somecompany FTP v6.0 for WinSock ready...
-220 Welcome to the online storage FTP server. Please check the main web
-site for system announcements and AUP. (O)
----> AUTH TLS
-234 AUTH command OK. Initializing SSL connection.
-TLS accepted as authentication type
-SSL DEBUG ACTIVE
-=>START SSL/TLS connect on COMMAND
-
-In VMS:
-
- 19. ftp open ftp.somecompany.com /user:pge.com/test_quota /password:xxxxxx
-Connected to ftp.somecompany.com.
-220 Somecompany FTP v6.0 for WinSock ready...
----> AUTH TLS
-234 AUTH command OK. Initializing SSL connection.
-TLS accepted as authentication type
-SSL DEBUG ACTIVE
-%SYSTEM-F-ACCVIO, access violation, reason mask=04, virtual
-address=FFFFFFFF8001A120, PC=000000000068B118, PS=0000001B
-
-Note: The Unix version received the second 220 response, the VMS version did
-not. That's odd, it's the same code... 25 Jan 2010.
-
-Added some essential details to the HELP FSEEK text. ckuus2.c, 25 Jan 2010.
-
-Discovered that the result returned by \fsearch() is totally unreliable.
-This is probably too hard to fix.
-
-FSEEK did not pay attention to SET CASE, searches were always case sensitive.
-Fixed in ckuus7.c, 26 Jan 2010.
-
-FSEEK failed to find anything if the search pattern was matched in the first
-line of the file. Fixed in ckuus7.c, 26 Jan 2010.
-
-\fword() and \fsplit().... Another change, but not backwards-incompatible.
-One may now put the word ALL (just like that, all uppercase) as the include
-set (4th argument) to indicate that there will be no break characters other
-than those explicitly given in the break set, e.g. \fsplit(\m(xx),&a,:,ALL)
-breaks a line only on a colon (:), nothing else. The original rules for
-cksplit() were more than a little counterintuitive: the default break set is
-all non alphanums, and the default include set is all alphanums, so if you
-wanted to parse (say) a CSV file, breaking only on comma, you had to think
-of all the characters you wanted to keep. This way you just say ALL.
-ckclib.c, 26 Jan 2010.
-
-Speaking of CSV files... How can you put comma as a function argument when
-comma is the function-argument separator? Use one of these forms:
-
- \fsplit(\m(xx),&a,",",ALL)
- \fsplit(\m(xx),&a,{,},ALL)
- \fsplit(\m(xx),&a,\44,ALL)
- \fsplit(\m(xx),&a,\fchar(44),ALL)
-
-From John Dunlap, U. of Washington Applied Physics Lab: 'When "stty -a <
-/dev/ttyS0 | grep crtscts" shows "crtscts" (not "-crtscts") and when using a
-three wire serial interface and when asking kermit to not use flow control
-(set flow none) then "ckutio.c1" (see attachments) fails while "ckutio.c"
-works. The result of "diff -u ckutio.c1 ckutio.c" is attached as "diffs"'.
-ckutio.c, 26 Jan 2010.
-
-Changed the year from 2009 to 2010 in the modules I worked on today and in
-the heralds, etc. ckckmai.c, ckuus5.c, ckutio.c, ckclib.c, ckuus7.c,
-26 Jan 2010.
-
-Built on Linux Fedora Core 3, regular and with OpenSSL 0.9.7a. Built on
-Ubuntu 9.4 OK, but SSL and Kerberos builds failed due to not finding libs
-and/or header files. I'm sure this could be fixed... 27 Jan 2010.
-
-Added SSL, KRB4, and KRB5 to the startup herald for versions that were
-built with SSL, Kerberos 4, or Kerberos 5. Built OK on Fedora 3 with
-linux+krb5+ssl and new banner shows correctly. ckuus5.c, 27 Jan 2010.
-
-Set NO_KRB5_INIT_ETS by default in ckuath.h since krb5_init_ets() is a no-op
-in Kerberos 1.4.x and later and in some installations it can't be found,
-which clobbers the build. ckuath.h, 27 Jan 2010.
-
-Adapted to MINIX 3 1.5, the first version that has virtual memory according
-to Andy T, who should know. On earlier versions (e.g. MINIX 3 1.2) any
-attempt to build C-Kermit causes the compiler to crash. Now the compiler
-doesn't crash but it spews out countless warnings about old-fashioned
-function declarations that I don't get anywhere else. The real problems
-came in ckutio.c where numerous symbols were undefined at compile time and
-the POSIX function tcgetpgrp() was not found at link time, even though there
-is a prototype for it in the MINIX header files, and there is no alternative
-(since POSIX doesn't let us use ioctl()). Also note that there is some
-confusion over the compile-time symbols MINIX, MINIX2, MINIX3, and MINIX315.
-You would expect MINIX to mean "any version of MINIX" but in some parts of
-ckutio.c it means MINIX 1.0. I sincerely doubt that C-Kermit 9.0 can be
-built on any version of Minix before 3.1.5 so I removed the confusion and
-made MINIX mean "any Minix". It builds on 3.1.5 OK now, except for the FTP
-client. This can probably be fixed but... Modules changed: ckcdeb.h,
-ckuver.h, ckcmai.c, ckuus5.c, ckutio.c, 1 Feb 2010.
-
-Later.. Andy says MINIX does not support job control, so no program is ever
-in the background. That settles that! 1 Feb 2010.
-
-Built OK on Minix, Linux, Mac OS X, Solaris 9, NetBSD 5.0.1... 1 Feb 2010.
-
----C-Kermit 9.0 Alpha.02---
-
-From Christian Corti at Uni-Stuttgart.de: fixes to allow building on SunOS
-4.1, which once was my main development platform but which is long-gone from
-here. ckupty.c, ckutio.c, 9 Feb 2010. (He says it is also necessary to
-comment out the "struct winsize" and "struct ttysize" in sys/ioctl.h;
-otherwise there will be a conflict with sys/ttycom.h (included by termios.h)
-which also declares these structs. But you need both includes.')
-
-From John Dunlap, a fix for Kermit protocol fixed packet-timeout interval
-going to a unexpected value (missing else clause in two places).
-ckcfn2.c, 9 Feb 2010.
-
-Added an aixg target to build on AIX with gcc when gcc is not installed as
-cc, and also added CC=$(CC) CC2=$(CC) clauses to the aix and aix+ssl
-targets. Wow, AIX really loses bigtime when receiving files through its ssh
-server. Streaming can't be used, sliding windows recover from errors but
-there are tons of them using the default 4K packets; 500 works much better.
-Built with IBM cc and gcc, and also tested (successfully) the new aix+ibmssl
-target, in which the OpenSSL headers and libs are in a standard place.
-makefile, 9 Feb 2010.
-
-In ckupty.h, make the #include <sys/ioctl.h> be #ifndef SUNOS41.
-From Christian Corti. 10 Feb 2010.
-
-Built on VMS E8.4. 12 Feb 2010.
-
-Tried to build on a real VAX-11/785 but the machine seems to be seriously
-wedged. 12-15 Feb 2010.
-
-Added note to CKVKER.COM to the effect the the 'f' option has no effect
-on VAX architecture. 15 Feb 2010.
-
-Moved the #include "ckvrtl.h" in the FTP module to below the include for
-utime.h, because building the VMS version with the 'i' option (meaning
-"include internal ftp client") results in "struct utimbuf tp" erroring out
-because struct utimbuf is not defined yet (at least in some version of VMS
-with some version of C). From Rob Brown, ckcftp.c, 20 Feb 2010.
-
-From Martin Vorlaender: new code in VMS C-Kermit build procedure to detect
-OpenSSL version automatically. ckvker.com, 22 Feb 2010.
-
-Added code to INPUT command to strip ANSI escape sequences. It's activated
-by SET SESSION-LOG TEXT. ckuusr.h: added prototype for chkaes();
-ckucon.c, ckucns.c: made inesc[] and oldesc[] global instead of static;
-ckuus4.c: doinput() code for skipping escape sequences. 1 Mar 2010.
-
-Peter Eichhorn complained that if you make an ssh connection with Kermit,
-then log out from the ssh host, and then use a "connect" command to
-make a new connection to the same host (which you can do with Telnet),
-Kermit says (e.g.):
-
- DNS Lookup... Can't get address for ssh -e none somehostname
- Sorry, can't open ssh -e none somehostname: Error 0
-
-I added code to detect and handle this case and it seems to work OK, even
-though it's kind of a hack. ckuusr.[ch], ckuus7.c, 1 Mar 2010.
-
-There has never been a clean way to put debugging messages (ECHO commands)
-in a script which are executed only if debugging is desired and ignored
-otherwise. You'd have to set a random variable and test it, or define a
-macro or whatever. To make this more straightforward, I added SET DEBUG
-MESSAGE ON/OFF/STDERR, and added a new MESSAGE (syn: MSG) command for printing
-debugging messages to stdout if SET DEBUG MESSAGE is ON or to stderr if SET
-DEBUG MESSAGE is STDERR. ckcmai.c, ckuus[r23].c, 12 Mar 2010.
-
-Also for debugging and error messages, I added \v(lastcommmand) so that
-the command that failed can be included in an IF FAIL or DEBUG error message.
-This works even for commands that have syntax errors.
-ckuusr.h, ckuus5.c, ckucmd.c, 12 Mar 2010.
-
-From SMS for VMS: 'Added/documented P3 options INTSELECT, OLDFIB, OLDIP.
-Disabled (commented out) automatic definition of NOSETTIME for VMS before
-V7.2 (vms_ver .lts. "VMS_V72").' ckcdeb.h, ckcftp.c, ckcnet.c, ckuus[2567].c,
-ckvfio.c, ckvker.com, ckvrtl.[ch], 15 Mar 2010.
-
-Exposed inesc[] and oldesc[] for VMS, so new INPUT command escape-sequence
-stripping can work (really, chkaes() and related global variables should be
-moved out of ck[uvd]con.c/ckucns.c and into a common module; do that later).
-ckuusr.h, ckvcon.c, 15 Mar 2010.
-
-Built OK on Solaris9, Mac OS X 10.4.11, RHEL4 (32-bit), RHEL5 (64-bit),
-AIX 5.3, SCO OpenServr 6.0.0... 15 Mar 2010.
-
-Not so good on VMS, turns out I made a typo in one of the VMS updates
-(#ifndef OLDIP instead of #ifdef...). ckcnet.c, 16 Mar 2010.
-
-More from SMS for VMS, 16 Mar 2010:
- . Set MAXPATH correctly for VMS, ckcdeb.h.
- . NAM -> NAML, QIO replaces system( "SET PROTECTION"), bugfixes in
- cvtdir() and nzltor(), ... (See comments): ckvfio.c, new ckvrms.h.
- (The RMS code in ckvfio.c was almost totally rewritten)
- . Moved "NAMX$*" (and related) macros to ckvrms.h, and renamed to
- "NAMX_*" (and similar "$" -> "_"), moved "FIB_*" macros from ckvrtl.c.
-
-These changes are mainly to accommodate the ODS5 file system, which has
-longer and mixed-case filenames, and also to execute certain commands
-(e.g. for setting file protection, deleting directories) directly instead
-of using a system() command.
-
-Built OK on VMS 8.3 (with and without network support). 16 Mar 2010.
-
-Failed to build on VMS 6.2. 16 Mar 2010.
-
-FreeBSD 8.0 <libutil.h> has a hexdump() prototype that conflicts with the
-hexdump macro defined in ckcdeb.h. Since the same thing is likely to happen
-elsewhere, I changed the Kermit macro to ckhexdump as well all references to
-it: ckcdeb.h, ckcftp.c, ckcnet.c, ckctel.c, ckuath.c, ckutio.c, 16 Mar 2010.
-
-Built OK on Digital Unix Tru-64 4.0E using "make osf", 16 Mar 2010.
-
-Tried again to build Digital Unix Tru64 4.0E using "make tru64-40e", but
-something prevents it from picking up the termios symbols and it blows up in
-ckutio.c, whereas this used to work in earlier C-Kermit versions. This is
-the only Tru64 system I still have access to, so I can't tell if it's a
-local peculiarity or what. Note that POSIX is not defined for this build.
-But if I define it, I get into trouble with "struct timeval". Tried again
-with "KFLAGS=-DPOSIX -DNOTIMEVAL" but that doesn't help. Tried "make
-dec-osf" and that worked OK but oddly enough it makes a Kermit with less
-features than "make osf". 16 Mar 2010.
-
-To go with MESSAGE and SET DEBUG MESSAGE, I added IF DEBUG, which is true
-if SET DEBUG MESSAGE is not OFF and false otherwise. ckuusr.h, ckuus6.c,
-16 Mar 2010.
-
-From SMS: Corrections to my merging of SMS's changes, ckcftp.c, ckvrtl.h.
-Builds OK on VMS 6.2 now. Also did an SSL build on VMS 8.3 with OpenSSL
-m0.9.7e and "OPENSSL_DISABLE_OLD_DES_SUPPORT" was included in P3
-automatically by Martin V's addition to ckvker.com. 17 Mar 2010.
-
-From SMS: #include <types.h> earlier for VMS in ckcdeb.h to pick up off_t
-before it is referenced. This allows C-Kermit to compile on VMS/Alpha 6.2
-but linking fails on fseeko() and ftello() (and yet, a functional executable
-is created, and FSEEK works right). Builds the same way with no problems at
-all on VMS 8.3 / Alpha. In this case we get the full 64-bit arithmetic...
-Well, 62 bits:
-
- ATLAS::C-Kermit>( ^ 2 63)
- 9223372036854775000.0
- ATLAS::C-Kermit>( ^ 2 62)
- 4611686018427387904
-
-whereas on VMS 6.2 we get integers only up to (^ 2 30). 17 Mar 2010.
-
-Changed the VMS build procedure to enable large file support automatically
-for non-VAX and VMS 7.3 or greater. No reason not to include this feature.
-Changed the sense of the F option to DISABLE large file support in the
-unlikely case that C-Kermit is being built on a suitable platform but the
-C library is older than VMS73_ACRTL-V0200, in which case fseeko() and
-ftello() will come up missing at link time. ckvker.com, 18 Mar 2010.
-
-Changed VMS build procedure to include the FTP client in any network build
-by default. Changed the sense of the I option to exclude the FTP client,
-in case anybody would want to do that. ckvker.com, 18 Mar 2010.
-
-From SMS: updated dependencies in CKVKER.COM, fix the "don't reinclude me"
-clause in CKVRTL.H. 19 Mar 2010.
-
-Built OK on VMS 6.2 and 8.3 with and without networking. Large file support
-included automatically in VMS 8.3 FTP client included automatically in both
-network builds. 19 Mar 2010.
-
-Changed hexdump() to ckhexdump() in ck_crp.c, which I missed before.
-19 Mar 2010.
-
----C-Kermit 9.0 Alpha.03---
-
-In HP-UX with the bundled-non ANSI compiler, we get warnings about functions
-such as endusershell(), which are declared void in the header files. But in
-non-ANSI builds we defind VOID to be int rather than void, so our prototypes
-are wrong. I checked that HP-UX 9, 10, and 11 all have void datatype and
-changed the definition of VOID to void in those cases. ckcdeb.h, 29 Mar 2010.
-
-Fixed a typo in a debug() statement in cksplit() that was causing some
-warnings. ckclib.c, 29 Mar 2010.
-
-Ditto in tls_load_certs(). ck_ssl.c, 29 Mar 2010.
-
-"make hpux1000o+ssl" files with:
-/usr/ccs/bin/ld: Unsatisfied symbols:
- __umoddi3 (code)
- __udivdi3 (code)
- __eprintf (code)
-
-It appears that OpenSSL (0.9.7c in this case) requires -lgcc.
-And indeed hpux1000gcc+ssl builds fine. 29 Mar 2010.
-
-There are various warnings in the SSL code in ckutio.c, ckcftp.c, and
-ckcnet.c about pointers not being assignment compatible, but I have learned
-from experience not to try to fix these (see notes from 6 Oct 2009).
-29 Mar 2010.
-
-connect(s, (struct sockaddr *)&hisctladdr, sizeof (hisctladdr)): In FTP,
-this doesn't work on RHEL5 / Mac OX X 6.1/2 64-bit. But the connect() in
-Telnet works. On Mac OS X 6.2 I tried changing the socket() call to be like
-the one in ckcnet.c for Telnet, but it made no difference. On a RHEL5.4
-system on i386, FTP works fine, so it's not the Red Hat version. On Digital
-Unix 4.0E 64-bit, same thing:
-
- 11:23:10.722 ftp_hookup[kermit.columbia.edu]=21
- 11:23:10.722 ftp hookup A[kermit.columbia.edu]
- 11:23:10.722 ftp hookup C[kermit.columbia.edu]
- 11:23:10.722 ftp hookup socket=4
- 11:23:10.722 ftp hookup HADDRLIST
- 11:23:10.723 ftp hookup connect failed=13
- 11:23:10.723 ftp hookup bad
-
-13 = Permission denied:
-
- [EACCESS] Search permission is denied for a component of the path prefix;
- or write access to the named socket is denied.
-
-On Gentoo Linux, also on Alpha, the errno is 51: Network is unreachable.
-Clearly some data type in the sockets structs is out of whack.
-
-The third connect() argument is "address length". The address is a
-struct sockaddr. About the third argument, RHEL5 "man connect" says:
-
- The third argument of connect() is in reality an int (and this is what
- 4.x BSD and libc4 and libc5 have). Some POSIX confusion resulted in
- the present socklen_t, also used by glibc. See also accept(2).
-
-Building on RHEL5 on x86_64, where size_t is 8 and socklen_t is 4, I get a
-warning:
-
- ckcftp.c: In function 'ftp_hookup':
- ckcftp.c:14667: warning:
- comparison is always true due to limited range of data
-
-Referring to:
-
- if (hisctladdr.sin_addr.s_addr != (unsigned long) -1)
-
-This seems to be the problem; if I remove the (unsigned long) cast (in two
-places), the problem goes away. Actually what I should be comparing it with
-is INADDR_NONE, which is defined appropriately in some header file, e.g. as
-0xffffffff. Also I define it explicitly as -1 if it is not defined in any
-header file (as is the case in Solaris 9). Tested OK on 64-bit RHEL5,
-32-bit RHEL5, Digital Unix 4.0E 64-bit, Solaris 9 32-bit, Mac OS X 10.4.11
-32-bit, Mac OS X 10.6.3 64-bit, AIX 5.3, Gentoo Linux 2.6.31 on Alpha
-64-bit, NetBSD 5.0.1 32-bit.... ckcftp.c, 29 Mar 2010.
-
----C-Kermit 9.0 Alpha.04---
-
-Yesterday's VOID redefinition caused problems for HP-UX in ckuusx.c, in the
-curses section where VOID is undef'd and not used to avoid a conflict with
-curses.h. As a workaround I defined a new macro CKVOID with the same
-definition as VOID and used it in the offending section of ckuusx. The real
-solution is to replace all references to VOID with CKVOID (since VOID is
-increasingly likely to cause conflicts), but a mass search and replace is
-not without risks. ckcdeb.h, ckuusx.c, 30 Mar 2010.
-
-Changed VOID and CKVOID definition to be 'void' for all HP-UX (verified by
-PeterE back to HP-UX 6.5, 1989). Still need to check this on HP-UX 5.21;
-if that's an exception it can be done in the makefile. ckcdeb.h, 30 Mar 2010.
-
-The change I made to allow CONNECT to reestablish a previous SSH connection
-prevented a new SSH connection to a different host to be made. Fixed in
-ckuus7.c, 30 Mar 2010.
-
-Fixed mistaken extern declarations of krb4_errno and krb5_errno as strings
-in nvlook(); they are ints. Built OK on Mac OS X 10.6.3. ckuus4.c, 30 Mar 2010.
-
-A fix to Trusted HP-UX makefile target from PeterE, to account for the
-equivalence of +openssl and +ssl as target suffixes. 30 Mar 2010.
-
-Added a new function \fcvtcsets(string,cset1,cset1) that converts a string
-from one character set to another. The csets are File Character-Set names.
-ckuus4.c, 31 Mar 2010.
-
-Added a new function \fdecodehex(string,prefix) that decodes a string
-containing prefixed hex bytes. Default prefix is %%, but any prefix of
-one of two chars (such as % or 0x) can be specified. ckuusr.h, ckclib.h,
-ckclib.c, ckuusr.c, 31 Mar 2010.
-
-Richard Nolde reports that Kermit can't find -lpam on Fedora 12 because it's
-in /lib rather than /usr/lib. RHEL5 has symlinks, FC12 should too. Added a
-note to the makefile. 1 Apr 2010.
-
-Build on Solaris 11 for the first time. Had to adjust ckuver.h to get the
-version herald right. This was on a box that reported its architecture as
-i86pc. 1 Apr 2010.
-
-Added MIME character-set names as invisible synonyms in the file and
-terminal character-set tables, fcstab[] and tcstab[]. Note that not all the
-character sets known to Kermit are registered in MIME. But at least now
-MIME-registered character sets can be referred to by their MIME names, e.g.
-ISO-8859-1, ISO646-ES, IBM437, WINDOWS-1252. These are not listed if you
-type ? in a field that is parsing them, unless you type a letter first,
-e.g. "i?" lists ISO- and IBM set names. Later maybe I'll make parallel
-tables, or keyword attribute bit that says whether a name is MIME or not.
-The real benefit of this change is that now Kermit can take its
-character-set names from external sources like email headers or web logs.
-ckuxla.c, 1 Apr 2010.
-
-Changed the IF command to accept a bare macro name its condition. This will
-parse and execute correctly if the macro is defined and if it has a numeric
-value, or if it is not defined, in which case it evaluates to 0 (FALSE). If
-it is defined but has a non-numeric value, a parse error occurs. ckuus6.c,
-2 Apr 2010.
-
-Added \fstringtype() function. Given a string argument, it tells whether
-the string is 7bit, 8bit, utf8, binary, etc. ckuusr.h, ckuus[4x].c,
-2 Apr 2010.
-
-Did a few builds to make sure there were no booboos. Solaris 9, NetBSD
-5.01, Linux RHEL4, HP-UX 10.20 (non-ANSI compiler and ANSI optimizing
-compiler), Mac OS X 10.4.11, SCO OSR 6.00. 5 Apr 2010.
-
----C-Kermit 9.0 Alpha.05---
-
-Increased maximum variable name length from 4K to 16K. Verified that
-too-long names are caught and recovered from correctly. ckuusr.h, 6 Apr 2010.
-
-Implemented a new \fsplit() option for parsing CSV files, which turns out to
-be a little complicated, because the separator is not just a comma, but a
-comma and all its surrounding spaces. Also there are special quoting rules
-for fields with embedded commas and fields with embedded quotes. ckclib.c,
-7 Apr 2010.
-
----C-Kermit 9.0 Alpha.06---
-
-VMS changes from SMS. They build OK, Kermit file transfers are still OK,
-but FTP text-mode GETs always hang on the 10th 8K network read. Couldn't
-get a debug log this time. ckcmai.c, ckvfio.c, ckvrms.h, ckvker.com.
-8 Apr 2010.
-
-Changing VNAML from 4K to 16K broke the build on HP-UX 9. Put it back to
-4K. 9 Apr 2010.
-
-John Dunlap, running days-long stress tests between E-Kermit and C-Kermit,
-found a bug in the packet-reading and -decoding code: If a NAK packet
-arrives with its length field corrupted to indicate a bigger size, and there
-are enough bytes following in the pipeline, ttinl() will return a too-long
-packet (if there are not enough bytes waiting to be read, then ttinl() will
-properly time out). In the bad case rpack() trusts the packet length, uses
-it as the basis for computation of the block-check length, which is then
-used to access memory that might not be there, causing (at least on John's
-Linux system) a segmentation fault. John added the normal clause to check
-the result of the block-check calculation, and I changed ttinl() to always
-break on the eol character (normally carriage return), since this can never
-appear in a packet, even if we "set control unprefix all". Also added a
-check to ttinl() to protect against length fields corrupted into illegal
-values. ckcfn2.c, ckutio.c, 13 Apr 2010.
-
-From Lewis McCarthy:
- Based on code inspection, C-Kermit appears to have an SSL-related security
- vulnerability analogous to that identified as CVE-2009-3767 (see e.g.
- http://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvename.cgi?name=CVE-2009-3767).
-
- I'm attaching a patch for this issue relative to the revision of ck_ssl.c
- obtained from a copy of http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ftp/test/tar/x.zip
- downloaded on 2010/07/30, which I believe is the latest.
-
- When this flaw was first widely publicized at last year's Black Hat
- conference, it was claimed that some public certificate authorities had
- indeed issued certificates that could be used to exploit this class of
- vulnerability. As far as I know they have not revealed specifically which
- public CA(s) had been found issuing such certificates.
- Some references: http://www.mseclab.com/?p=180
- http://www.theregister.co.uk/2009/07/30/universal_ssl_certificate/
-
-Patches added to ck_ssl.c, 4 Aug 2010.
-
-Peter Eichhorn reported that "RENAME ../x ." didn't work. This is a side
-effect of the changes of 2006 to the RENAME command, there was a little
-confusion in the renameone() routine; fixed in ckuus6.c, 4 Aug 2010.
-
-If only one file is FOPEN'd, FCLOSE given with no arguments would close it.
-Turns out to be a bad idea. Example: program with an input and output file,
-try to close the output file before it is opened by just typing FCLOSE; this
-can mess up the input file. For safety FCLOSE has to require a channel
-number or ALL. ckuus7.c, 4 Aug 2010.
-
-Added \fstrcmp(s1,s2,case,start,length), which has the advantage over IF
-EQU,LGT,LLT that case senstivity can be specified as a function arg, and
-also substrings can be specified. ckuusr.h, ckuus[24].c, 5 Aug 2010.
-
-The CSV feature of Alpha.06 had a subtle flaw, namely that if the last item
-in a comma separated list was enclosed within doublequotes with a trailing
-space after the closing doublequote, a spurious empty final element would be
-created in the result array. Fixed in cksplit(), ckclib.c, 5 Aug 2010.
-
----Alpha.07---
-
-The CSV feature of \fsplit() splits a comma-separated list into an array.
-To turn the array back into a comma separated list, \fjoin(&a,\44,1) almost
-works, except for elements contain literal doublequotes, such as:
-
- Mohammad "The Greatest" Ali
-
-This calls for making a symbolic CSV argument for \fjoin() like the one that
-was made for \fsplit(): \fjoin(&a,CSV). Also \fjoin(&a,TSV) for
-Tab-separated list. Thus if Kermit reads a record in CSV format, splits it
-into an array, and then joins the array back into a CSV record, the result
-will be equivalent to the original, according to the CSV definition. It
-might not be identical, because if the result had extraneous spaces before
-or after the separating commas, these are discarded, but that does not
-affect the elements themselves. Furthermore it is now possible to convert
-a comma-separated list into a tab-separated list, and vice versa (which is
-not a simple matter of changing commas to tabs or vice versa). ckuus4.c,
-12 Aug 2010.
-
-From Joop Boonen 26 Juli 2010: "Added HAVE_LOCKDEV as openSuSE >= 11.3 uses
-lockdev but not baudboy. They use ttylock directly. The program code has
-been added so the the program works without a problem." makefile, ckcdeb.h,
-ckutio.c, ckuus5.c, 23 Aug 2010.
-
----Alpha.08---
-
-From Gary Mills at the U of Manitoba: convert Solaris version from BSD ptys
-to streams ptys because there are only 48 BSD-style ptys and he was running
-out. No code changes needed, the only change necessary was to add the
-following flags to the makefile target:
-
- -DHAVE_STREAMS -DHAVE_GRANTPT -DHAVE_PTSNAME
- -DPUSH_PTEM -DPUSH_LDTERM -DPUSH_TTCOMPAT
-
-makefile, ckcmai.c, 21 Sep 2010.
-
-Testing this in Solaris 9 I see that the DES library disappeared. Added
-code to the solaris9 targets (also used by Solaris 10 and 11) to check for
-this. makefile, 21 Sep 2010.
-
-The Solaris target checked the OpenSSL version automatically to set the
-right flag, the Linux target didn't. Put the OpenSSL-version testing code
-in the Linux target too. makefile, 21 Sep 2010.
-
-A couple minor changes to the tru64-51b makefile targets from Steven Schweda
-but there still are some problems with the Tru64 Unix builds.
-makefile, 21 Sep 2010.
-
----Alpha.09---
-
-\fcontents(\&a[3]) got an error if the array was declared but its dimension
-was less than 3, which is bad when dealing with (say) an array created
-dynamically by \fsplit(), which might or might not have a third element.
-In case it doesn't -- i.e. in case we are referring to an out of range
-element of any array that is declared -- we should just return a null
-string, as we do with other types of variables that are not defined.
-For that matter, ditto even if the array is not declared; what useful
-purpose is served by throwing an error in this case?
-ckuus4.c, 30 Dec 2010.
-
-cksplit() treats \ as a quoting character. If the source string contains
-backslashes, they are swallowed (or, if doubled, one is kept). That's not
-good for parsing external data, such as lines read from files, where there
-are no quoting rules. This came up when parsing CSV files; as a workaround,
-I made \fsplit() treat backslash as an ordinary character for CSV and TSV
-splitting (a better solution might be yet another argument that specifies
-a quote character). ckclib.c, 30 Dec 2010.
-
-Began converting C-Kermit to Open Source with the Simplified 3-Clause BSD
-license. Updated the text for the INTRO, LICENSE, NEWS, and SUPPORT
-commands. Fixed things so the copyright year to be displayed is defined in
-one place (ck_cryear in ckcmai.c), rather than hardwired into text strings
-all over the place. COPYING.TXT, ckcmai.c, ckuus[256].c, 2 Jun 2011.
-
-When I added MIME synonyms for Kermit character-set names, I left a bogus
-entry in the tables ("windows-1251") that was in the wrong place
-alphabetically, thus preventing most references to file character-set names
-from working right. Removed the bogus entry. ckuxla.c, 2 Jun 2011.
-
-Most combinations work OK, but not translating Cyrillic text from UTF-8
-to Latin/Cyrillic, and probably the same would be true for any case of
-converting from UTF-8 or UCS-2 to anything else. The problem was in
-xgnbyte(), which converts the input stream from the specified character to
-UCS2; it needed to make a special case for when the input file was already
-Unicode. Believe it or not, this problem occurred at least as far back as
-8.0.201 (9.5 years ago) and nobody noticed. So if the fix isn't perfect
-probably nobody will notice that either. ckcfns.c, 3 Jun 2011.
-
-The SET BLOCK CHECK command did not parse all the items in its keyword
-list. Fixed in ckuus3.c, 3 Jun 2011.
-
-For EM-APEX ocean floats project, where buoys in stormy waters have to
-transmit data through an earth satellite using non-error-correcting modems,
-John Dunlap ran exhaustive stress tests of Kermit protocol transfers through
-a simulated connection that injected errors and delays and identified a
-weakness in Kermit protocol when it is used under extremely bad conditions:
-If a data byte of the S packet (or its Ack) is corrupted and the 1-byte
-checksum is also corrupted in such a way that that the checksum matches the
-corrupted data, the two Kermit programs will disagree as to the negotiated
-parameters. For example, if file Sender's RPT field is changed from '~' to
-'^', the receiver will decode the packet incorrectly. Ditto for most of the
-other parameters. The result is that a corrupted file is received but
-reported correct. John suggested a new mode of operation in which the Type
-3 block check is used for all packets. Such a mode can not be negotiated
-because the negotiation packet itself is assumed by all Kermit programs to
-have a 1-byte checksum. Added SET BLOCK-CHECK 5 to the parser (with
-invisible synonym FORCE-3". ckuus3.c, 3 Jun 2011.
-
-Added supporting code for SET BLOCK 5: ckcfn[23].c, ckcpro.w, ckcmai.c,
-ckuus3.c, 3 Jun 2011.
-
-Added code to skip the heuristic that S and I packets always have block
-check type 1. File transfer OK between two C-Kermits with SET BLOCK 5.
-rpack(): ckcfn2.c, 5 Jun 2011.
-
-Made the file receiver put "5" in the block-check-type in its ACK to the
-S-Packet. spar(): ckcfns.c, 5 Jun 2011.
-
-Now the question is: Can we make the file receiver automatically and safely
-recognize a three-byte block check on an incoming S or I packet? It's
-tricky because the block check field is not self-identified, it's just the
-last "n" characters of string indicated by the length field, so correct
-decoding of the packet depends on stateful knowledge of "n". How about this:
-rpack() already knows what type of packet it is, so if it's an S or I packet
-and the 8th byte of the data field is "5" and last 3 bytes, when interpreted
-as the CRC, match the packet contents, then we accept the packet and switch
-to BLOCK 5 mode.
-
-On the other hand, if the "5" was put there by corruption, the CRC should
-catch the error. In that case we NAK the packet and presumabely get a
-different version back. There would be no reason to try to re-read the same
-packet with a different block check, because the "5" could not possibly be
-there legitimately unless it had a 3-byte CRC. To be clear, this is
-cheating. We read the packet contents before we know the packet is correct,
-then we check that it *is* correct. I made the 4-line change to rpack()
-and it works OK in the absense of transmission errors. ckcfn2.c, 3 Jun 2011.
-
-So the various combinations should work as desired:
-
- . Sender and receiver both support and are told to SET BLOCK 5 ("SB5").
- . Sender SB5, but receiver doesn't support it (errors out).
- . Sender SB5, receiver supports it but wasn't told (auto-recognizes it).
- . Receiver SB5 but sender no (errors out).
-
-Note in the last case, the receiver should NOT automatically fall back to
-standard behavior because if the user said SET BLOCK 5 that means every
-packet MUST be protected by CRC to prevent the I/S packets from being
-corrupted.
-
-Installed new HELP SET BLOCK-CHECK text. ckuus2.c, 5 Jun 2011.
-
-Autodownload didn't work when the S or I packet had a 3-byte block check
-because kstart() checked it for a 1-byte checksum. Fixed in kstart(),
-ckcfn2.c, 6 Jun 2011. However, older Kermit versions and programs that
-claim to do "autodownload" will never recognize this type of packet. No
-big deal since even if they did, the transfer would fail anyway.
-
-Added 'FORCE 3' to E-Kermit, called it EK 1.7. The option is "-b 5". Works
-OK for sending and receiving, both with and without the new option. Also
-works with "-b 5" if you send an S packet to it with '5' in the BCT field.
-Changes were minimal, I have them all in ek17.diff.
-
-I could probably also make a new G-Kermit in about 10 minutes, but who cares
-about G-Kermit... We already have two useful Kermit programs that
-interoperate with the new protocol. 6 Jun 2011.
-
-Replaced the very inadequate help texts for functions \fword() and
-\fsplit() with new ones. ckuus2.c, 6 Jun 2011.
-
-There were a couple reports of file corruption that I was saving for later.
-Now that now is later I dug up the messages, files, and logs and it turns
-out that nobody had reported a reproducible case of Kermit corrupting a
-file. There have been non-reproducible cases though, almost certainly due
-to corruption of the S or I packet or its ACK, which is why we now have SET
-BLOCK 5. Even with BLOCK CHECK 5, there is no guarantee that the same thing
-won't happen, it is just far less likely. Even if we added a 32-bit CRC or
-even 64-bit one, there would still be a small chance it could happen.
-
-7 Jun 2011:
-
-Corrected various #ifdefs (or lack of them) when building C-Kermit with
-different combinations of feature-selection options such as NOCSETS, NOICP,
-NOLOCAL, NOSPL, NOUNICODE, etc. ckcfns.c ckcmai.c ckcxla.h ckuus2.c
-ckuus4.c ckuus5.c ckuus6.c ckuusr.c, 7 Jun 2011. After running the script
-that does all these builds (84 of them) I ran it again to make sure that
-none of the changes broke builds that succeeded before the changes were made.
-
-Built OK on Solaris9 ("make solaris9")
-Ditto with Krb5 and OpenSSL 0.9.8q ("make solaris9g+openssl+shadow+pam+zlib")
-
-Built OK on Mac OS X 10.4.11 ("make macosx").
-Also "make macosx+krb5+openssl.
-
-Built OK on Linux RHEL4 ("make linux").
-Built OK on Linux RHEL4 with OpenSSL 0.9.7a ("make linux+ssl").
-Built OK on Linux RHEL5 ("make linux").
-
-"make linux+ssl" fails on RHEL5 because of DES, even though the target
-tests for the presence or absence of the DES libraries. In this case the
-libraries are there but they lack the functions des_ecb3_encrypt,
-des_random_seed, and des_set_odd_parity. The build succeeds as:
-
- make linux+ssl KFLAGS=-UCK_SSL
-
-Since DES is now considered harmful, Jeff Altman suggests that all OpenSSL
-builds, even for old versions, should omit it ("If you are building with
-openssl and no kerberos or srp, just disable DES. Disabling DES will impact
-telnet and rlogin but it won't matter if you have no ability to negotiate a
-session key").
-
-From Ian Beckwith, patches for Debian Linux:
- . Change all '-' to '\(hy' in man page (new pedantry): ckuker.nr.
- . Make IKSD authentication (using PAM) ask for a password when an invalid
- username has been given, to avoid disclosing which account names are valid:
- ckufio.c, ckuus7.c.
- . Fix spelling errors: ckcftp.c, ckuus2.c, ckuker.nr, ckcpro.w, ckuusr.h.
- . Patch makefile to support install to a staging area with DESTDIR.
- . Some other patches (mainly for typos) were for plain-text documentation
- files that were generated from Web pages; I updated the web pages.
-
-A big corporate C-Kermit user has an application where a local C-Kermit
-makes a connection to a remote one, uploads some files, and then if the
-server has any new patch files for the local, it sends the patches and
-does a REMOTE HOST command to run the patch program. This stopped working
-in C-Kermit 6.0 or 7.0 when I put a check to prevent it, because "it makes
-no sense to send REMOTE commands to the local end, because the results are
-sent back to the remote to be displayed on its screen but it has no screen".
-That may be true, but if the user needs to control the local from the
-remote, they should be able to. I removed the checks. This doesn't solve
-the problem of where the output goes; ideally it would go to the local
-screen but I don't see any elegant and simple way to make that change.
-However the output redirectors can still be used with the REMOTE command
-so the results can be captured to a remote file, which could then be sent.
-ckuus7.c, 7 Jun 2011.
-
-Changed SET VARIABLE-EVALUATION to SET COMMAND VARIABLE-EVALUATION, but left
-the former version available. ckuusr.c, 9 Jun 2011.
-
-Documented the SET COMMAND VARIABLE-EVALUATION command, which I added in
-2008. ck90.html, 9 Jun 2011.
-
-Renamed all old Mac OS X makefile targets to have the prefix "old" to avoid
-confusing them with the current targets, and made macosx10 a synonym for
-macosx, so those who used previous makefiles will get a current target
-without having to know the new name. makefile, 9 Jun 2011.
-
-Added XMESSAGE, which is to MESSAGE as XECHO is ECHO: prints the text
-without a line terminator, so it can be continued by subsequent [X]MESSAGE
-commands. ckuusr.[ch], 9 Jun 2011.
-
-Back to "make linux+ssl" on RHEL5... I took the coward's way out and added
-code to the makefile target to check whether the build worked (somebody let
-me know if there is a better way to check), and if not to give a message
-suggesting they "make clean ; make linux+ssl KFLAGS=-UCK_DES". makefile,
-9 Jun 2011.
-
-Noticed that \frecurse() would dump core if called with no arguments.
-Fixed in ckuus4.c, 9 Jun 2011.
-
-Added \q() as an alternative to the more verbose \fliteral() for quoting
-strings that contain characters (like \) that would otherwise be significant
-to Kermit. It's more efficient because it isn't a function call, and 'q'
-is an intuitive letter to mean 'quote'. It also works better than
-\fliteral() because functions treat commas and braces specially. ckuus4.c,
-10 Jun 2011.
-
-Built OK on VMS 8.3 on Alpha, no net. DEC C caught a couple glitches in the
-new code that gcc didn't catch, which I fixed. ckuus[25].c, 10 Jun 2011.
-
-Built OK on VMS 8.3 on Alpha with Multinet 5.3. The SSL build failed but
-I'm not going to worry about it. 10 Jun 2011.
-
-Built OK on NetBSD 5.1. 10 Jun 2011.
-
-Tried to resurrect my old "build-all" machine, an IBM Netfinity 3500 from
-1997 with 20-some mountable bootable hard disks with lots of 1990s OS's on
-them. No dice. I can see the BIOS but not the hard disks. The
-configuration is still correct because it tries to boot from the mountable
-hard disk, but it fails (I tried six different ones).
-
-Tried to resurrect my old Siemens Nixdorf RM 200 MIPS machine. Booted OK,
-headless even, but makes a hellish high-pitched whine, like a dentist drill.
-It's pretty slow too. "make sinix542" (for SINIX 5.4.2) bombed at link
-time on no rdchk(). Fixed by #including <sys/filio.h>. ckutio.c, 10 Jun 2011.
-
-Tried to resurrect my old SCO Xenix 2.3.4 machine, also headless. Amazingly
-it still works; it can't use a monitor but I can Telnet to it. Had to tweak
-some #ifdefs but I got a no-net version built successfully. According to my
-notes, it hasn't been possible to build with TCP/IP since C-Kermit 8.0,
-but how many people ever had SCO Xenix 2.3.4 with TCP/IP anyway? Anyway we
-still have the binaries for C-Kermit 7.0. ckuus4.c, 10 Jun 2011.
-
-Built OK on AIX 5.3. Built OK on Solaris 10. 11 Jun 2011.
-
-Tried harder to revive the build-all machine, now it sort of works, but not
-all of the bootable OS's work. Built C-Kermit 9.0 OK on OpenBSD 3.0. Built
-OK on QNX 4.25 but had to #ifdef references to IXANY in ckutio.c and ckupty.
-Built OK on NetBSD 1.5.1 (2000). Tried "make netbsd+ssl" on this one, it's
-OpenSSL 0.9.5a 1 Apr 2000, but it bombs out in ckuath.c, no big deal.
-Another problem in NetBSD 1.5.2 is that even though off_t is 8, CK_OFF_T
-is 4. Worth noting but not worth fixing unless someone else notices.
-13 Jun 2011.
-
-SuSE 7.0... boots OK but telnet server doesn't work. Can telnet out but
-it's too flaky, connection drops if I try to transfer a file.
-
-OpenBSD 2.5 [1999] OK. Red Hat 7.1 OK. Red Hat 7.1 with OpenSSL 0.9.6
-not OK, same error as with 0.9.5a:
-
-ckuath.c
-In file included from ck_ssl.h:48,
- from ckuath.c:225:
-/usr/include/openssl/des.h:77: warning: redefinition of `Block'
-ckuat2.h:86: warning: `Block' previously declared here
-/usr/include/openssl/des.h:83: redefinition of `struct des_ks_struct'
-/usr/include/openssl/des.h:91: warning: redefinition of `Schedule'
-ckuat2.h:90: warning: `Schedule' previously declared here
-
-So it appears that OpenSSL support is broken for pre-0.9.7. Tried
-building it again with -UCK_SSL (since the errors are originating from
-from des.h)... But it still failed exactly the same way. I found
-#includes for des.h in ckuath.c and and ck_ssl.h and #ifdef'd them out,
-but it still fails:
-
-In file included from /usr/include/openssl/evp.h:89,
- from /usr/include/openssl/x509.h:67,
- from /usr/include/openssl/ssl.h:69,
- from ck_ssl.h:51,
- from ckuath.c:227:
-/usr/include/openssl/des.h:77: warning: redefinition of `Block'
-ckuat2.h:86: warning: `Block' previously declared here
-/usr/include/openssl/des.h:83: redefinition of `struct des_ks_struct'
-/usr/include/openssl/des.h:91: warning: redefinition of `Schedule'
-ckuat2.h:90: warning: `Schedule' previously declared here
-
-Built OK on Debian 2.1. 13 Jun 2011.
-
-On FreeBSD 4.4, it blows up with:
-ckufio.c: In function vpass':
-ckufio.c:8201: conflicting types for 'initgroups'
-/usr/include/unistd.h:154: previous declaration of 'initgroups'
-ckufio.c:8201: warning: extern declaration of 'initgroups' doesn't match global
-one. Fixed by defining NODCLINITGROUPS for FreeBSD in ckufio.c. It might not
-be the right fix, but I don't have a lot of other FreeBSD versions to
-compare with. Anyway now it builds OK on 4.4, and also on FreeBSD 3.3.
-ckufio.c, 13 Jun 2011.
-
-Tried to build on SCO Open Server 5.0.7 but it fails at link time because
-it can't find rdchk(). But it's supposed to be there! Come back to this
-later...
-
-Red Hat 6.1 i386 32/64 linux 2332545
-Red Hat 7.1 i386 32/64 linux 2368528
-Red Hat EL4 i386 32/74 linux 2363067
-Red Hat EL5.6 i386 64 linux 2371279
-Solaris9 sparc 32/64 solaris9 2849896
-Solaris9+ssl sparc 32/64 solaris9 5021764
-Solaris10 sparc 32/64 solaris10 2855776
-QNX i386 32 qnx32 2012323
-NetBSD 1.5.1 i386 32/64 netbsd 2198055
-NetBSD 5.1 i386 32/64 netbsd 2159863
-OpenBSD 2.5 i386 32/64 openbsd 2236036
-Mac OS X 10.6.7 x86_64 64 macosx 2.7M
-Mac OS X 10.4.11 ppc 32/64 macosx 2496304
-Debian 2.1 i386 32/64 linux 2213221
-FreeBSD 4.4 i386 32/64 freebsd 2291333
-FreeBSD 3.3 i386 32/64 freebsd 2147370
-SINIX 5.42 mips 32 sinix542 3319325 (1995)
-SCO Unixware 2.1.3 i386 32 uw213 2242176
-SCO OSR6.0.0 i386 32/64 sco_osr600 2368300
-
-More builds, 14 June 2011:
-
-VMS 6.2 alpha 32 make mn 2556928 No TCP/IP
-VMS 6.2 alpha 32 make m 3112960 UCX 4.0
-Solaris 11 i386 32/64 solaris11 2823860
-Solaris 11 i386 32/64 solaris11+ssl 2993660 OpenSSL 0.9.8l
-NetBSD 5.1 i386 32/64 netbsd+krb5 2307855 Kerberos 5
-Linux Slackware 12.1.0 i386 32/65 linux 2175754
-Linux Fedora 14 i386 32/64 linux 2256514
-Linux Fedora 14 i386 32/64 linux+ssl ....... OpenSSL 1.0.0d
-Linux Fedora 14 i386 32/64 linux+krb 2449614 (*)
-
-(*) make linux+krb5 "LIBS=$LIBS /lib/libk5crypto.so.3 /lib/libcom_err.so.2"
-
-Noticed that netbsd+ssl build on NetBSD 5.1 said "NetBSD 1.5" in its banner.
-Fixed by replacing the old hardwired target with the new "subroutinized"
-target a'la linux+ssl and adapting it to NetBSD. makefile, 15 Jun 2011.
-
-Same deal for Kerberos 5, make a new netbsd+krb5 target and it builds ok,
-at least once one figures out where the Kerberos headers and libs are.
-makefile, 15 Jun 2011.
-
-Same deal for the netbsdnc target, now it simply defined NOCURSES and
-chains to the main netbsd target. makefile, 15 Jun 2011.
-
-Tried to build with Kerberos 5 on Solaris, fails because the DES library
-no longer exists. This one is beyond me, sorry.
-
-Made new targets for MirBSD, mirbsd and mirbsd+ssl, makefile 15 Jun 2011.
-
-In OpenSUSE 11.2 with OpenSSL 0.9.8r we bomb on undefined references from
-various DES library routines. Builds OK without DES.
-
-Various linux+krb5 builds fail because can't find -lgssapi_krb5
-
-SSL builds with OpenSSL < 0.9.7 fail even though there is code to support
-the older SSL.
-
-Fixed some printf %ld vs int instances in the sizeofs section of SHOW FEATURES.
-ckuus5.c, 15 Jun 2011.
-
-Fixed the new linux+ssl target to actually use the SSLINC and SSLLIBS
-definitions, oops. makefile, 15 Jun 2011.
-
-15 June 2011 builds (Beta.01):
-
-AIX 5.3 ppc 32/64 aix+ssl 3283846 OpenSSL 0.9.8m
-NetBSD 5.1 i386 32/64 netbsd 2159863
-NetBSD 5.1 i386 32/64 netbsd+ssl 2350274 OpenSSL 0.9.9-dev
-NetBSD 5.1 i386 32/64 netbsd+krb5 2349627 MIT Krb5 1.6.3
-FreeBSD 8.2 i386 32/64 freebsd 2298414
-FreeBSD 8.2 i386 32/64 freebsd+ssl 2448961 OpenSSL 0.9.8q
-OpenBSD 4.7 i386 32/64 openbsd 2266132
-OpenBSD 4.7 i386 32/64 openbsd+ssl 2409263 OpenSSL 0.9.8k
-MirBSD 10 i386 32/64 mirbsd 2216601
-MirBSD 10 i386 32/64 mirbsd+ssl 2358318 OpenSSL 0.9.8r
-OpenSuse 11.2 x86_64 64 linux 2348468
-OpenSuse 11.2 x86_64 64 linux+ssl (*) 2546540 OpenSSL 0.9.8r
-RHEL 5.6 ia64 64 linux 4390687
-RHEL 5.6 ia64 64 linux+ssl (*) 4775007 OpenSSL 0.9.8e
-Ubuntu 9.10 i386 32/64 linux 2275523
-Ubuntu 9.10 i386 32/64 linux+ssl 2466708 OpenSSL 0.9.8r
-Gentoo 1.12.13 ppc 32/64 linux 2386597
-Gentoo 1.12.13 ppc64 64 linux 2749015
-Gentoo 1.12.13 ppc64 64 linux+ssl 3002150 OpenSSL 0.9.8r
-Gentoo 1.12.13 sparc 32/64 linux 2478382
-Gentoo 1.12.13 sparc 32/64 linux+ssl 2690499 OpenSSL 0.9.8r
-Solaris 9 sparc 32/64 solaris9 2849896
-Solaris 10 i386 32/64 solaris10 2837620
-IRIX 6.5 R10000 32/64 irix65 2869704
-
-* and KFLAGS=-UCK_DES
-
-Tried building on NetBSD 5.1 with Heimdal Kerberos using:
-
-make netbsd+krb5 \
- "KFLAGS=-DHEIMDAL" \
- "K5INC=-I/usr/include" \
- "K5LIB=-L/usr/lib"
-
-It found all its headers OK, but it blew up in ckuath.c. Small wonder,
-ckccfg.html says:
-
-HEIMDAL
- Should be defined if Kerberos V support is provided by HEIMDAL. Support
- for this option is not complete in C-Kermit 8.0. Anyone interested in
- working on this should contact kermit-support.
-
-'krb5-config --version' gives the MIT Kerberos 5 version number.
-
-Make a new netbsd+krb5+ssl target based on the combination of the new
-netbsd+ssl and netbsd+krb5 targets. There were lots of warnings in the
-compilation but no errors, but it produced an executable that starts and
-does normal things but I have no idea if the SSL or Kerberos functions work.
-makefile, 16 Jun 2011.
-
-Changed the cu-solaris9-krb5 target to test for the presence of DES because
-DES isn't there, to see if this would allow a Kerberos build to proceed.
-And it worked, amazing. At least the build completed, I have no way to test
-the Kerberos part. makefile, 16 Jun 2011.
-
-Updated the solaris9+ssl target to do the DES testing. makefile, 16 Jun 2011.
-
-Updated cu-solaris+krb5 target to test whether the GSSAPI library is called
-libgassapi or libgassapi_krb5. makefile, 16 Jun 2011.
-
-Added lots of tests to the Linux Kerberos 5 entries, linux+krb5 and
-linux+krb5+ssl, because some have libk5crypto and some don't; some have
-libcom_err and some don't; and some have libgssapi_krb5 (e.g. RHEL5,
-OpenSuse 11.2) whereas others have libgssapi (Gentoo).
-
-16 June 2011 builds (Beta.01):
-
-NetBSD 5.1 i386 32/64 netbsd+krb5+ssl 2451757 OpenSSL 0.9.9 MIT Krb5 1.6.3
-Solaris 9 sparc 32/64 solaris9+krb5 2543036 MIT Kerberos 5 1.7.1
-Solaris 9 sparc 32/64 solaris9+ssl 5021544 OpenSSL 0.9.8q (gcc)
-Gentoo... ppc 32/64 linux 2386597
-Gentoo... ppc 32/64 linux+ssl 2593561 OpenSSL 0.9.8r
-Gentoo... ppc64 64 linux 2749015
-Gentoo... ppc64 64 linux+ssl 3002150 OpenSSL 0.9.8r
-RHEL5 x86_64 64 linux+krb5 (*) 2563878 MIT Kerberos 5 1.6.1
-RHEL5 x86_64 64 linux+krb5+ssl(*) 2563878 MIT Kerberos 5 1.6.1
-Fedora 14 i386 32/64 linux+krb5+ssl 2539891 MIT Krb5 + OpenSSL 0.9.8r
-
-* KFLAGS=-UCK_DES
-
---- C-Kermit 9.0.299 Beta.01 ---
-
-sizeof() can return a long or an int, so neither printf("%d",sizeof(blah));
-or printf("%ld",sizeof(blah)); can be used everywhere. Changed the
-"sizeofs" section of SHOW FEATURES in the dumbest (and therefore most
-portable) way to squelch the warnings. ckuus5.c, 17 Jun 2011.
-
-From John Dunlap: "Watching the server screen led me to offer a cosmetic
-patch for ckuusx.c. I noticed that the server screen said it was
-"RESENDING" when it really wasn't. The attached patch emits blanks to
-insure that old labels are completely erased." ckuusx.c, 17 Jun 2011.
-
-Nelson Beebe found two places where I had SSLLIBS in the makefile instead of
-SSLLIB. makefile, 18 Jun 2011.
-
-More important he knew how to force gcc to load the right header files for
-OpenSSL 1.0.0d (by using '-isystem' rather than '-I'). Previously it was
-using the 0.9.8r header files but linking with the 1.0.0d libraries. This
-is not in the sources, it's done in the 'make' command, e.g.:
-
- export PATH=/usr/bin:$PATH
- export SSLINC=-isystem/usr/include
- export "SSLLIB=-L/usr/lib -Wl,-rpath,/usr/lib"
- make linux+ssl
-
-Folded the previous linux+openssl+zlib+shadow+pam and linux+openssl+shadow
-targets into linux+ssl. Checked the linuxso (scripting only) target, builds
-OK, 600K. Made new subroutinized linux+krb5+krb4 target but can't find
-anyplace to test it. Made new subroutinized linux+shadow+pam target, works
-fine on RHEL4. Revised comments and lists again. makefile, 18 Jun 2011.
-
-For the pluggable-disk OS's that boot OK but lack a working network, I
-rigged up a serial connection using a DB9-FF null modem cable, and then a
-DB9-MF modem cable to make it reach. I don't see any modem signals on
-either end, but the data goes through OK. COM1 on the desktop PC,
-/dev/ttyS1 or whatever on Lab. Since there are no modem signals, can't use
-RTS/CTS. At 57600bps with Xon/Xoff, 500-byte packets and sliding windows,
-transfers work OK at about 5000cps using 5 window slots; takes 8 minutes to
-transfer the gzipped C-Kermit tarball. Kermit to the rescue. 19 Jun 2011.
-
-Transferred the tarball over serial ports to SCO OSR5.0.5 at 38.4Kbps, the
-highest speed supported, 12 minutes, no errors, 3300cps. Unpack, make
-sco32v505udk, OK. Also built the TCP/IP version and it almost made an
-outbound connection, but only once. 19 Jun 2011.
-
-Ditto for Solaris 2.6/i386, except 57.6Kbps, 4K-byte packets, no problem.
-Solaris 8/i386, ditto. 19 Jun 2011.
-
-SCO OpenServer 5.0.5 i386 32 sco32v505udk 1940964 No TCP/IP
-SCO OpenServer 5.0.5 i386 32 sco32v505udknet 2314668 With TCP/IP
-Sun Solaris 2.6 i386 32 solaris26g 4661368
-Sun Solaris 8 i386 32 solaris8g 4675432
-
-When using compact substring notation, \s(xx[4]) returns the whole string
-xx starting at position 4, but \s(xx[4:]) returns an empty string. Fixed
-the latter to be like the former. ckuus5.c, 20 Jun 2010.
-
-Really it would have been nicer if \s(xx[4]) returned a single character,
-the 4th character of xx, but it's too late now. Added another "separator"
-character '.' (period) for that: \s(xx[4.]) is the 4th character of xx.
-ckuus4.c, 20 Jun 2010.
-
-Back to SCO OSR5.0.7... This failed before because 'rdchk' came up unknown
-at link time, unlike all previous OSR5's, that used rdchk() in place of the
-FIONREAD ioctl. Added #ifdefs to make a special case for 5.0.7. I'm not
-sure this is the best way, but this is the minimal change to get it to work.
-If anybody cares, maybe the same can be done for previous OSR5 releases.
-ckutio.c, 20 Jun 2010 (search for SCO_OSR507).
-
-SCO OpenServer 5.0.7 i386 32 sco32v507 1895724 No TCP/IP
-SCO OpenServer 5.0.7 i386 32 sco32v507net 2246792 With TCP/IP
-
-Checked current code on RHEL4, found that my GSSAPI-lib finding makefile
-target didn't look in enough places; added some more. makefile, 21 Jun 2011.
-
-Got reports back on HPUX from Peter Eichhorn, almost all good on HP-UX 8, 9,
-10, and 11. 21 Jun 2011.
-
-Got access to Debian 5.0 and 7-to-be ("Wheezy/Sid"). Regular 'make linux' is
-OK in Debian 5, but in 7 can't find crypt, res_search, or dn_expand; had
-to add more library search clauses to 'make linux'. makefile, 21 Jun 2011.
-
-In Debian 7.0, libk5crypto could not be found without adding another clause
-to 'make linux+krb5'. That done, the SSL build (1.0.0d) was OK, as well as
-the krb5+ssl one. makefile, 21 Jun 2011.
-
-I found a Linux box that had both Kerberos 4 and 5 installed and tried 'make
-linux+krb5+krb4', which failed because of missing DES functions. Tried
-'make linux+krb5+krb4 KFLAGS=-UCK_DES', but that fails too, even though it
-doesn't fail for Kerberos 5 alone, so probably some Krb4 code is making
-unguarded calls to the DES routines. What is really needed is a way to
-completely strip all DES references from any given build. 21 Jun 2011.
-
------------------------------------
-To check:
-
-after logging out from "ssh jezebel":
-(/home/fdc/) C-Kermit>ssh jezebel
- Closing connection
-Sorry, network type not supported
-(/home/fdc/) C-Kermit> # This happens in Linux but not Solaris
-
----------------------------------
-***************************