New timing infrastructure. There's a new function schedule_timer()
[u/mdw/putty] / doc / udp.but
CommitLineData
6f3bdded 1\# This file is so named for tradition's sake: it contains what we
2\# always used to refer to, before they were written down, as
3\# PuTTY's `unwritten design principles'. It has nothing to do with
4\# the User Datagram Protocol.
5
6\define{versionidudp} \versionid $Id$
7
8\A{udp} PuTTY hacking guide
9
10This appendix lists a selection of the design principles applying to
11the PuTTY source code. If you are planning to send code
12contributions, you should read this first.
13
14\H{udp-portability} Cross-OS portability
15
16Despite Windows being its main area of fame, PuTTY is no longer a
17Windows-only application suite. It has a working Unix port; a Mac
18port is in progress; more ports may or may not happen at a later
19date.
20
21Therefore, embedding Windows-specific code in core modules such as
22\cw{ssh.c} is not acceptable. We went to great lengths to \e{remove}
23all the Windows-specific stuff from our core modules, and to shift
24it out into Windows-specific modules. Adding large amounts of
25Windows-specific stuff in parts of the code that should be portable
26is almost guaranteed to make us reject a contribution.
27
28The PuTTY source base is divided into platform-specific modules and
29platform-generic modules. The Unix-specific modules are all in the
30\c{unix} subdirectory; the Mac-specific modules are in the \c{mac}
31subdirectory; the Windows-specific modules are in the \c{windows}
32subdirectory.
33
34All the modules in the main source directory - notably \e{all} of
35the code for the various back ends - are platform-generic. We want
36to keep them that way.
37
38This also means you should stick to what you are guaranteed by
39ANSI/ISO C (that is, the original C89/C90 standard, not C99). Try
40not to make assumptions about the precise size of basic types such
41as \c{int} and \c{long int}; don't use pointer casts to do
42endianness-dependent operations, and so on.
43
44(There are one or two aspects of ANSI C portability which we
45\e{don't} care about. In particular, we expect PuTTY to be compiled
46on 32-bit architectures \e{or bigger}; so it's safe to assume that
47\c{int} is at least 32 bits wide, not just the 16 you are guaranteed
48by ANSI C.)
49
50\H{udp-multi-backend} Multiple backends treated equally
51
52PuTTY is not an SSH client with some other stuff tacked on the side.
53PuTTY is a generic, multiple-backend, remote VT-terminal client
54which happens to support one backend which is larger, more popular
55and more useful than the rest. Any extra feature which can possibly
56be general across all backends should be so: localising features
57unnecessarily into the SSH back end is a design error. (For example,
58we had several code submissions for proxy support which worked by
59hacking \cw{ssh.c}. Clearly this is completely wrong: the
60\cw{network.h} abstraction is the place to put it, so that it will
61apply to all back ends equally, and indeed we eventually put it
62there after another contributor sent a better patch.)
63
64The rest of PuTTY should try to avoid knowing anything about
65specific back ends if at all possible. To support a feature which is
66only available in one network protocol, for example, the back end
67interface should be extended in a general manner such that \e{any}
68back end which is able to provide that feature can do so. If it so
69happens that only one back end actually does, that's just the way it
70is, but it shouldn't be relied upon by any code.
71
72\H{udp-globals} Multiple sessions per process on some platforms
73
74Some ports of PuTTY - notably the in-progress Mac port - are
75constrained by the operating system to run as a single process
76potentially managing multiple sessions.
77
39934deb 78Therefore, the platform-independent parts of PuTTY never use global
79variables to store per-session data. The global variables that do
80exist are tolerated because they are not specific to a particular
81login session: \c{flags} defines properties that are expected to
82apply equally to \e{all} the sessions run by a single PuTTY process,
83the random number state in \cw{sshrand.c} and the timer list in
84\cw{timing.c} serve all sessions equally, and so on. But most data
85is specific to a particular network session, and is therefore stored
86in dynamically allocated data structures, and pointers to these
87structures are passed around between functions.
6f3bdded 88
89Platform-specific code can reverse this decision if it likes. The
90Windows code, for historical reasons, stores most of its data as
91global variables. That's OK, because \e{on Windows} we know there is
92only one session per PuTTY process, so it's safe to do that. But
93changes to the platform-independent code should avoid introducing
39934deb 94global variables, unless they are genuinely cross-session.
6f3bdded 95
96\H{udp-pure-c} C, not C++
97
98PuTTY is written entirely in C, not in C++.
99
100We have made \e{some} effort to make it easy to compile our code
101using a C++ compiler: notably, our \c{snew}, \c{snewn} and
102\c{sresize} macros explicitly cast the return values of \cw{malloc}
103and \cw{realloc} to the target type. (This has type checking
104advantages even in C: it means you never accidentally allocate the
105wrong size piece of memory for the pointer type you're assigning it
106to. C++ friendliness is really a side benefit.)
107
108We want PuTTY to continue being pure C, at least in the
109platform-independent parts and the currently existing ports. Patches
110which switch the Makefiles to compile it as C++ and start using
111classes will not be accepted. Also, in particular, we disapprove of
112\cw{//} comments, at least for the moment. (Perhaps once C99 becomes
113genuinely widespread we might be more lenient.)
114
115The one exception: a port to a new platform may use languages other
116than C if they are necessary to code on that platform. If your
117favourite PDA has a GUI with a C++ API, then there's no way you can
118do a port of PuTTY without using C++, so go ahead and use it. But
119keep the C++ restricted to that platform's subdirectory; if your
120changes force the Unix or Windows ports to be compiled as C++, they
121will be unacceptable to us.
122
123\H{udp-security} Security-conscious coding
124
125PuTTY is a network application and a security application. Assume
126your code will end up being fed deliberately malicious data by
127attackers, and try to code in a way that makes it unlikely to be a
128security risk.
129
130In particular, try not to use fixed-size buffers for variable-size
131data such as strings received from the network (or even the user).
132We provide functions such as \cw{dupcat} and \cw{dupprintf}, which
133dynamically allocate buffers of the right size for the string they
134construct. Use these wherever possible.
135
136\H{udp-multi-compiler} Independence of specific compiler
137
138Windows PuTTY can currently be compiled with any of four Windows
139compilers: MS Visual C, Borland's freely downloadable C compiler,
140the Cygwin / \cw{mingw32} GNU tools, and \cw{lcc-win32}.
141
142This is a really useful property of PuTTY, because it means people
143who want to contribute to the coding don't depend on having a
144specific compiler; so they don't have to fork out money for MSVC if
145they don't already have it, but on the other hand if they \e{do}
146have it they also don't have to spend effort installing \cw{gcc}
147alongside it. They can use whichever compiler they happen to have
148available, or install whichever is cheapest and easiest if they
149don't have one.
150
151Therefore, we don't want PuTTY to start depending on which compiler
152you're using. Using GNU extensions to the C language, for example,
153would ruin this useful property (not that anyone's ever tried it!);
154and more realistically, depending on an MS-specific library function
155supplied by the MSVC C library (\cw{_snprintf}, for example) is a
156mistake, because that function won't be available under the other
157compilers. Any function supplied in an official Windows DLL as part
158of the Windows API is fine, and anything defined in the C library
159standard is also fine, because those should be available
160irrespective of compilation environment. But things in between,
161available as non-standard library and language extensions in only
162one compiler, are disallowed.
163
164(\cw{_snprintf} in particular should be unnecessary, since we
165provide \cw{dupprintf}; see \k{udp-security}.)
166
167Compiler independence should apply on all platforms, of course, not
168just on Windows.
169
170\H{udp-small} Small code size
171
172PuTTY is tiny, compared to many other Windows applications. And it's
173easy to install: it depends on no DLLs, no other applications, no
174service packs or system upgrades. It's just one executable. You
175install that executable wherever you want to, and run it.
176
177We want to keep both these properties - the small size, and the ease
178of installation - if at all possible. So code contributions that
179depend critically on external DLLs, or that add a huge amount to the
180code size for a feature which is only useful to a small minority of
181users, are likely to be thrown out immediately.
182
183We do vaguely intend to introduce a DLL plugin interface for PuTTY,
184whereby seriously large extra features can be implemented in plugin
185modules. The important thing, though, is that those DLLs will be
186\e{optional}; if PuTTY can't find them on startup, it should run
187perfectly happily and just won't provide those particular features.
188A full installation of PuTTY might one day contain ten or twenty
189little DLL plugins, which would cut down a little on the ease of
190installation - but if you really needed ease of installation you
191\e{could} still just install the one PuTTY binary, or just the DLLs
192you really needed, and it would still work fine.
193
194Depending on \e{external} DLLs is something we'd like to avoid if at
195all possible (though for some purposes, such as complex SSH
196authentication mechanisms, it may be unavoidable). If it can't be
197avoided, the important thing is to follow the same principle of
198graceful degradation: if a DLL can't be found, then PuTTY should run
199happily and just not supply the feature that depended on it.
200
201\H{udp-single-threaded} Single-threaded code
202
203PuTTY and its supporting tools, or at least the vast majority of
204them, run in only one OS thread.
205
206This means that if you're devising some piece of internal mechanism,
207there's no need to use locks to make sure it doesn't get called by
208two threads at once. The only way code can be called re-entrantly is
209by recursion.
210
211That said, most of Windows PuTTY's network handling is triggered off
212Windows messages requested by \cw{WSAAsyncSelect()}, so if you call
213\cw{MessageBox()} deep within some network event handling code you
214should be aware that you might be re-entered if a network event
215comes in and is passed on to our window procedure by the
216\cw{MessageBox()} message loop.
217
218Also, the front ends (in particular Windows Plink) can use multiple
219threads if they like. However, Windows Plink keeps \e{very} tight
220control of its auxiliary threads, and uses them pretty much
221exclusively as a form of \cw{select()}. Pretty much all the code
222outside \cw{windows/winplink.c} is \e{only} ever called from the one
223primary thread; the others just loop round blocking on file handles
224and send messages to the main thread when some real work needs
225doing. This is not considered a portability hazard because that bit
226of \cw{windows/winplink.c} will need rewriting on other platforms in
227any case.
228
229One important consequence of this: PuTTY has only one thread in
230which to do everything. That \q{everything} may include managing
231more than one login session (\k{udp-globals}), managing multiple
232data channels within an SSH session, responding to GUI events even
233when nothing is happening on the network, and responding to network
234requests from the server (such as repeat key exchange) even when the
235program is dealing with complex user interaction such as the
236re-configuration dialog box. This means that \e{almost none} of the
237PuTTY code can safely block.
238
239\H{udp-keystrokes} Keystrokes sent to the server wherever possible
240
241In almost all cases, PuTTY sends keystrokes to the server. Even
242weird keystrokes that you think should be hot keys controlling
243PuTTY. Even Alt-F4 or Alt-Space, for example. If a keystroke has a
244well-defined escape sequence that it could usefully be sending to
245the server, then it should do so, or at the very least it should be
246configurably able to do so.
247
248To unconditionally turn a key combination into a hot key to control
249PuTTY is almost always a design error. If a hot key is really truly
250required, then try to find a key combination for it which \e{isn't}
251already used in existing PuTTYs (either it sends nothing to the
252server, or it sends the same thing as some other combination). Even
253then, be prepared for the possibility that one day that key
254combination might end up being needed to send something to the
255server - so make sure that there's an alternative way to invoke
256whatever PuTTY feature it controls.
257
258\H{udp-640x480} 640\u00D7{x}480 friendliness in configuration panels
259
260There's a reason we have lots of tiny configuration panels instead
261of a few huge ones, and that reason is that not everyone has a
2621600\u00D7{x}1200 desktop. 640\u00D7{x}480 is still a viable
263resolution for running Windows (and indeed it's still the default if
264you start up in safe mode), so it's still a resolution we care
265about.
266
267Accordingly, the PuTTY configuration box, and the PuTTYgen control
268window, are deliberately kept just small enough to fit comfortably
269on a 640\u00D7{x}480 display. If you're adding controls to either of
270these boxes and you find yourself wanting to increase the size of
271the whole box, \e{don't}. Split it into more panels instead.
272
273\H{udp-makefiles-auto} Automatically generated \cw{Makefile}s
274
275PuTTY is intended to compile on multiple platforms, and with
276multiple compilers. It would be horrifying to try to maintain a
277single \cw{Makefile} which handled all possible situations, and just
278as painful to try to directly maintain a set of matching
279\cw{Makefile}s for each different compilation environment.
280
281Therefore, we have moved the problem up by one level. In the PuTTY
282source archive is a file called \c{Recipe}, which lists which source
283files combine to produce which binaries; and there is also a script
284called \cw{mkfiles.pl}, which reads \c{Recipe} and writes out the
285real \cw{Makefile}s. (The script also reads all the source files and
286analyses their dependencies on header files, so we get an extra
287benefit from doing it this way, which is that we can supply correct
288dependency information even in environments where it's difficult to
289set up an automated \c{make depend} phase.)
290
291You should \e{never} edit any of the PuTTY \cw{Makefile}s directly.
292They are not stored in our source repository at all. They are
293automatically generated by \cw{mkfiles.pl} from the file \c{Recipe}.
294
295If you need to add a new object file to a particular binary, the
296right thing to do is to edit \c{Recipe} and re-run \cw{mkfiles.pl}.
297This will cause the new object file to be added in every tool that
298requires it, on every platform where it matters, in every
299\cw{Makefile} to which it is relevant, \e{and} to get all the
300dependency data right.
301
302If you send us a patch that modifies one of the \cw{Makefile}s, you
303just waste our time, because we will have to convert it into a
304change to \c{Recipe}. If you send us a patch that modifies \e{all}
305of the \cw{Makefile}s, you will have wasted a lot of \e{your} time
306as well!
307
308(There is a comment at the top of every \cw{Makefile} in the PuTTY
309source archive saying this, but many people don't seem to read it,
310so it's worth repeating here.)
311
312\H{udp-ssh-coroutines} Coroutines in \cw{ssh.c}
313
314Large parts of the code in \cw{ssh.c} are structured using a set of
315macros that implement (something close to) Donald Knuth's
316\q{coroutines} concept in C.
317
318Essentially, the purpose of these macros are to arrange that a
319function can call \cw{crReturn()} to return to its caller, and the
320next time it is called control will resume from just after that
321\cw{crReturn} statement.
322
323This means that any local (automatic) variables declared in such a
324function will be corrupted every time you call \cw{crReturn}. If you
325need a variable to persist for longer than that, you \e{must} make
326it a field in one of the persistent state structures: either the
327local state structures \c{s} or \c{st} in each function, or the
328backend-wide structure \c{ssh}.
329
330See
331\W{http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/coroutines.html}\c{http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/coroutines.html}
332for a more in-depth discussion of what these macros are for and how
333they work.
334
335\H{udp-compile-once} Single compilation of each source file
336
337The PuTTY build system for any given platform works on the following
338very simple model:
339
340\b Each source file is compiled precisely once, to produce a single
341object file.
342
343\b Each binary is created by linking together some combination of
344those object files.
345
346Therefore, if you need to introduce functionality to a particular
347module which is only available in some of the tool binaries (for
348example, a cryptographic proxy authentication mechanism which needs
349to be left out of PuTTYtel to maintain its usability in
350crypto-hostile jurisdictions), the \e{wrong} way to do it is by
351adding \cw{#ifdef}s in (say) \cw{proxy.c}. This would require
352separate compilation of \cw{proxy.c} for PuTTY and PuTTYtel, which
353means that the entire \cw{Makefile}-generation architecture (see
354\k{udp-makefiles-auto}) would have to be significantly redesigned.
355Unless you are prepared to do that redesign yourself, \e{and}
356guarantee that it will still port to any future platforms we might
357decide to run on, you should not attempt this!
358
359The \e{right} way to introduce a feature like this is to put the new
360code in a separate source file, and (if necessary) introduce a
361second new source file defining the same set of functions, but
362defining them as stubs which don't provide the feature. Then the
363module whose behaviour needs to vary (\cw{proxy.c} in this example)
364can call the functions defined in these two modules, and it will
365either provide the new feature or not provide it according to which
366of your new modules it is linked with.
367
368Of course, object files are never shared \e{between} platforms; so
369it is allowable to use \cw{#ifdef} to select between platforms. This
370happens in \cw{puttyps.h} (choosing which of the platform-specific
371include files to use), and also in \cw{misc.c} (the Windows-specific
372\q{Minefield} memory diagnostic system). It should be used
373sparingly, though, if at all.
374
375\H{udp-perfection} Do as we say, not as we do
376
377The current PuTTY code probably does not conform strictly to \e{all}
378of the principles listed above. There may be the occasional
379SSH-specific piece of code in what should be a backend-independent
380module, or the occasional dependence on a non-standard X library
381function under Unix.
382
383This should not be taken as a licence to go ahead and violate the
384rules. Where we violate them ourselves, we're not happy about it,
385and we would welcome patches that fix any existing problems. Please
386try to help us make our code better, not worse!