Rejig the Translation panel controls and documentation to remove the emphasis
[u/mdw/putty] / doc / faq.but
1 \define{versionidfaq} \versionid $Id$
2
3 \A{faq} PuTTY \i{FAQ}
4
5 This FAQ is published on the PuTTY web site, and also provided as an
6 appendix in the manual.
7
8 \H{faq-intro} Introduction
9
10 \S{faq-what}{Question} What is PuTTY?
11
12 PuTTY is a client program for the SSH, Telnet and Rlogin network
13 protocols.
14
15 These protocols are all used to run a remote session on a computer,
16 over a network. PuTTY implements the client end of that session: the
17 end at which the session is displayed, rather than the end at which
18 it runs.
19
20 In really simple terms: you run PuTTY on a Windows machine, and tell
21 it to connect to (for example) a Unix machine. PuTTY opens a window.
22 Then, anything you type into that window is sent straight to the
23 Unix machine, and everything the Unix machine sends back is
24 displayed in the window. So you can work on the Unix machine as if
25 you were sitting at its console, while actually sitting somewhere
26 else.
27
28 \H{faq-support} Features supported in PuTTY
29
30 \I{supported features}In general, if you want to know if PuTTY supports
31 a particular feature, you should look for it on the
32 \W{http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/}{PuTTY web site}.
33 In particular:
34
35 \b try the
36 \W{http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/changes.html}{changes
37 page}, and see if you can find the feature on there. If a feature is
38 listed there, it's been implemented. If it's listed as a change made
39 \e{since} the latest version, it should be available in the
40 development snapshots, in which case testing will be very welcome.
41
42 \b try the
43 \W{http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/wishlist/}{Wishlist
44 page}, and see if you can find the feature there. If it's on there,
45 and not in the \q{Recently fixed} section, it probably \e{hasn't} been
46 implemented.
47
48 \S{faq-ssh2}{Question} Does PuTTY support SSH-2?
49
50 Yes. SSH-2 support has been available in PuTTY since version 0.50.
51
52 Public key authentication (both RSA and DSA) in SSH-2 is new in
53 version 0.52.
54
55 \S{faq-ssh2-keyfmt}{Question} Does PuTTY support reading OpenSSH or
56 \cw{ssh.com} SSH-2 private key files?
57
58 PuTTY doesn't support this natively (see
59 \W{http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/wishlist/key-formats-natively.html}{the wishlist entry}
60 for reasons why not), but as of 0.53
61 PuTTYgen can convert both OpenSSH and \cw{ssh.com} private key
62 files into PuTTY's format.
63
64 \S{faq-ssh1}{Question} Does PuTTY support SSH-1?
65
66 Yes. SSH-1 support has always been available in PuTTY.
67
68 \S{faq-localecho}{Question} Does PuTTY support \i{local echo}?
69
70 Yes. Version 0.52 has proper support for local echo.
71
72 In version 0.51 and before, local echo could not be separated from
73 local line editing (where you type a line of text locally, and it is
74 not sent to the server until you press Return, so you have the
75 chance to edit it and correct mistakes \e{before} the server sees
76 it). New in version 0.52, local echo and local line editing are
77 separate options, and by default PuTTY will try to determine
78 automatically whether to enable them or not, based on which protocol
79 you have selected and also based on hints from the server. If you
80 have a problem with PuTTY's default choice, you can force each
81 option to be enabled or disabled as you choose. The controls are in
82 the Terminal panel, in the section marked \q{Line discipline
83 options}.
84
85 \S{faq-savedsettings}{Question} Does PuTTY support storing settings,
86 so I don't have to change them every time?
87
88 Yes, all of PuTTY's settings can be saved in named session profiles.
89 You can also change the default settings that are used for new sessions.
90 See \k{config-saving} in the documentation for how to do this.
91
92 \S{faq-disksettings}{Question} Does PuTTY support storing its
93 settings in a disk file?
94
95 Not at present, although \k{config-file} in the documentation gives
96 a method of achieving the same effect.
97
98 \S{faq-fullscreen}{Question} Does PuTTY support full-screen mode,
99 like a DOS box?
100
101 Yes; this is a new feature in version 0.52.
102
103 \S{faq-password-remember}{Question} Does PuTTY have the ability to
104 \i{remember my password} so I don't have to type it every time?
105
106 No, it doesn't.
107
108 Remembering your password is a bad plan for obvious security
109 reasons: anyone who gains access to your machine while you're away
110 from your desk can find out the remembered password, and use it,
111 abuse it or change it.
112
113 In addition, it's not even \e{possible} for PuTTY to automatically
114 send your password in a Telnet session, because Telnet doesn't give
115 the client software any indication of which part of the login
116 process is the password prompt. PuTTY would have to guess, by
117 looking for words like \q{password} in the session data; and if your
118 login program is written in something other than English, this won't
119 work.
120
121 In SSH, remembering your password would be possible in theory, but
122 there doesn't seem to be much point since SSH supports public key
123 authentication, which is more flexible and more secure. See
124 \k{pubkey} in the documentation for a full discussion of public key
125 authentication.
126
127 \S{faq-hostkeys}{Question} Is there an option to turn off the
128 \I{verifying the host key}annoying host key prompts?
129
130 No, there isn't. And there won't be. Even if you write it yourself
131 and send us the patch, we won't accept it.
132
133 Those annoying host key prompts are the \e{whole point} of SSH.
134 Without them, all the cryptographic technology SSH uses to secure
135 your session is doing nothing more than making an attacker's job
136 slightly harder; instead of sitting between you and the server with
137 a packet sniffer, the attacker must actually subvert a router and
138 start modifying the packets going back and forth. But that's not all
139 that much harder than just sniffing; and without host key checking,
140 it will go completely undetected by client or server.
141
142 Host key checking is your guarantee that the encryption you put on
143 your data at the client end is the \e{same} encryption taken off the
144 data at the server end; it's your guarantee that it hasn't been
145 removed and replaced somewhere on the way. Host key checking makes
146 the attacker's job \e{astronomically} hard, compared to packet
147 sniffing, and even compared to subverting a router. Instead of
148 applying a little intelligence and keeping an eye on Bugtraq, the
149 attacker must now perform a brute-force attack against at least one
150 military-strength cipher. That insignificant host key prompt really
151 does make \e{that} much difference.
152
153 If you're having a specific problem with host key checking - perhaps
154 you want an automated batch job to make use of PSCP or Plink, and
155 the interactive host key prompt is hanging the batch process - then
156 the right way to fix it is to add the correct host key to the
157 Registry in advance. That way, you retain the \e{important} feature
158 of host key checking: the right key will be accepted and the wrong
159 ones will not. Adding an option to turn host key checking off
160 completely is the wrong solution and we will not do it.
161
162 If you have host keys available in the common \i\c{known_hosts} format,
163 we have a script called
164 \W{http://svn.tartarus.org/sgt/putty/contrib/kh2reg.py?view=markup}\c{kh2reg.py}
165 to convert them to a Windows .REG file, which can be installed ahead of
166 time by double-clicking or using \c{REGEDIT}.
167
168 \S{faq-server}{Question} Will you write an SSH server for the PuTTY
169 suite, to go with the client?
170
171 No. The only reason we might want to would be if we could easily
172 re-use existing code and significantly cut down the effort. We don't
173 believe this is the case; there just isn't enough common ground
174 between an SSH client and server to make it worthwhile.
175
176 If someone else wants to use bits of PuTTY in the process of writing
177 a Windows SSH server, they'd be perfectly welcome to of course, but
178 I really can't see it being a lot less effort for us to do that than
179 it would be for us to write a server from the ground up. We don't
180 have time, and we don't have motivation. The code is available if
181 anyone else wants to try it.
182
183 \S{faq-pscp-ascii}{Question} Can PSCP or PSFTP transfer files in
184 \i{ASCII} mode?
185
186 Unfortunately not.
187
188 Until recently, this was a limitation of the file transfer protocols:
189 the SCP and SFTP protocols had no notion of transferring a file in
190 anything other than binary mode. (This is still true of SCP.)
191
192 The current draft protocol spec of SFTP proposes a means of
193 implementing ASCII transfer. At some point PSCP/PSFTP may implement
194 this proposal.
195
196 \H{faq-ports} Ports to other operating systems
197
198 The eventual goal is for PuTTY to be a multi-platform program, able
199 to run on at least Windows, Mac OS and Unix.
200
201 Porting will become easier once PuTTY has a generalised porting
202 layer, drawing a clear line between platform-dependent and
203 platform-independent code. The general intention was for this
204 porting layer to evolve naturally as part of the process of doing
205 the first port; a Unix port has now been released and the plan
206 seems to be working so far.
207
208 \S{faq-ports-general}{Question} What ports of PuTTY exist?
209
210 Currently, release versions of PuTTY tools only run on full Win32
211 systems and Unix. \q{Win32} includes Windows 95, 98, and ME, and it
212 includes Windows NT, 2000, XP, and Vista.
213
214 In the development code, partial ports to the Mac OSes exist (see
215 \k{faq-mac-port}).
216
217 Currently PuTTY does \e{not} run on Windows CE (see \k{faq-wince}),
218 and it does not quite run on the Win32s environment under Windows
219 3.1 (see \k{faq-win31}).
220
221 We do not have release-quality ports for any other systems at the
222 present time. If anyone told you we had an EPOC port, or an iPaq port,
223 or any other port of PuTTY, they were mistaken. We don't.
224
225 There are some third-party ports to various platforms, mentioned
226 on the
227 \W{http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/links.html}{Links page of our website}.
228
229 \S{faq-unix}{Question} \I{Unix version}Is there a port to Unix?
230
231 As of 0.54, there are Unix ports of most of the traditional PuTTY
232 tools, and also one entirely new application.
233
234 If you look at the source release, you should find a \c{unix}
235 subdirectory. There are a couple of ways of building it,
236 including the usual \c{configure}/\c{make}; see the file \c{README}
237 in the source distribution. This should build you Unix
238 ports of Plink, PuTTY itself, PuTTYgen, PSCP, PSFTP, and also
239 \i\c{pterm} - an \cw{xterm}-type program which supports the same
240 terminal emulation as PuTTY. We do not yet have a Unix port of
241 Pageant.
242
243 If you don't have \i{Gtk}, you should still be able to build the
244 command-line tools.
245
246 Note that Unix PuTTY has mostly only been tested on Linux so far;
247 portability problems such as BSD-style ptys or different header file
248 requirements are expected.
249
250 \S{faq-unix-why}{Question} What's the point of the Unix port? Unix
251 has OpenSSH.
252
253 All sorts of little things. \c{pterm} is directly useful to anyone
254 who prefers PuTTY's terminal emulation to \c{xterm}'s, which at
255 least some people do. Unix Plink has apparently found a niche among
256 people who find the complexity of OpenSSL makes OpenSSH hard to
257 install (and who don't mind Plink not having as many features). Some
258 users want to generate a large number of SSH keys on Unix and then
259 copy them all into PuTTY, and the Unix PuTTYgen should allow them to
260 automate that conversion process.
261
262 There were development advantages as well; porting PuTTY to Unix was
263 a valuable path-finding effort for other future ports, and also
264 allowed us to use the excellent Linux tool
265 \W{http://valgrind.kde.org/}{Valgrind} to help with debugging, which
266 has already improved PuTTY's stability on \e{all} platforms.
267
268 However, if you're a Unix user and you can see no reason to switch
269 from OpenSSH to PuTTY/Plink, then you're probably right. We don't
270 expect our Unix port to be the right thing for everybody.
271
272 \S{faq-wince}{Question} Will there be a port to Windows CE or PocketPC?
273
274 We have done some work on such a port, but it only reached an early
275 stage, and certainly not a useful one. It's no longer being actively
276 worked on.
277
278 However, there's a third-party port at
279 \W{http://www.pocketputty.net/}\c{http://www.pocketputty.net/}.
280
281 \S{faq-win31}{Question} Is there a port to \i{Windows 3.1}?
282
283 PuTTY is a 32-bit application from the ground up, so it won't run on
284 Windows 3.1 as a native 16-bit program; and it would be \e{very}
285 hard to port it to do so, because of Windows 3.1's vile memory
286 allocation mechanisms.
287
288 However, it is possible in theory to compile the existing PuTTY
289 source in such a way that it will run under \i{Win32s} (an extension to
290 Windows 3.1 to let you run 32-bit programs). In order to do this
291 you'll need the right kind of C compiler - modern versions of Visual
292 C at least have stopped being backwards compatible to Win32s. Also,
293 the last time we tried this it didn't work very well.
294
295 If you're interested in running PuTTY under Windows 3.1, help and
296 testing in this area would be very welcome!
297
298 \S{faq-mac-port}{Question} Will there be a port to the \I{Mac OS}Mac?
299
300 There are several answers to this question:
301
302 \b The Unix/Gtk port is already fully working under Mac OS X as an X11
303 application.
304
305 \b A native (Cocoa) Mac OS X port has been started. It's just about
306 usable, but is of nowhere near release quality yet, and is likely to
307 behave in unexpected ways. Currently it's unlikely to be completed
308 unless someone steps in to help.
309
310 \b A separate port to the classic Mac OS (pre-OSX) is also in
311 progress; it too is not ready yet.
312
313 \S{faq-epoc}{Question} Will there be a port to EPOC?
314
315 I hope so, but given that ports aren't really progressing very fast
316 even on systems the developers \e{do} already know how to program
317 for, it might be a long time before any of us get round to learning
318 a new system and doing the port for that.
319
320 However, some of the work has been done by other people; see the
321 \W{http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/links.html}{Links page of our website}
322 for various third-party ports.
323
324 \S{faq-iphone}{Question} Will there be a port to the iPhone?
325
326 We have no plans to write such a port ourselves; none of us has an
327 iPhone, and developing and publishing applications for it looks
328 awkward and expensive. Such a port would probably depend upon the
329 stalled Mac OS X port (see \k{faq-mac-port}).
330
331 However, there is a third-party SSH client for the iPhone and
332 iPod\_Touch called \W{http://www.instantcocoa.com/products/pTerm/}{pTerm},
333 which is apparently based on PuTTY. (This is nothing to do with our
334 similarly-named \c{pterm}, which is a standalone terminal emulator for
335 Unix systems; see \k{faq-unix}.)
336
337 \H{faq-embedding} Embedding PuTTY in other programs
338
339 \S{faq-dll}{Question} Is the SSH or Telnet code available as a DLL?
340
341 No, it isn't. It would take a reasonable amount of rewriting for
342 this to be possible, and since the PuTTY project itself doesn't
343 believe in DLLs (they make installation more error-prone) none of us
344 has taken the time to do it.
345
346 Most of the code cleanup work would be a good thing to happen in
347 general, so if anyone feels like helping, we wouldn't say no.
348
349 See also
350 \W{http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/wishlist/dll-frontend.html}{the wishlist entry}.
351
352 \S{faq-vb}{Question} Is the SSH or Telnet code available as a Visual
353 Basic component?
354
355 No, it isn't. None of the PuTTY team uses Visual Basic, and none of
356 us has any particular need to make SSH connections from a Visual
357 Basic application. In addition, all the preliminary work to turn it
358 into a DLL would be necessary first; and furthermore, we don't even
359 know how to write VB components.
360
361 If someone offers to do some of this work for us, we might consider
362 it, but unless that happens I can't see VB integration being
363 anywhere other than the very bottom of our priority list.
364
365 \S{faq-ipc}{Question} How can I use PuTTY to make an SSH connection
366 from within another program?
367
368 Probably your best bet is to use Plink, the command-line connection
369 tool. If you can start Plink as a second Windows process, and
370 arrange for your primary process to be able to send data to the
371 Plink process, and receive data from it, through pipes, then you
372 should be able to make SSH connections from your program.
373
374 This is what CVS for Windows does, for example.
375
376 \H{faq-details} Details of PuTTY's operation
377
378 \S{faq-term}{Question} What \i{terminal type} does PuTTY use?
379
380 For most purposes, PuTTY can be considered to be an \cw{xterm}
381 terminal.
382
383 PuTTY also supports some terminal \i{control sequences} not supported by
384 the real \cw{xterm}: notably the Linux console sequences that
385 reconfigure the colour palette, and the title bar control sequences
386 used by \i\cw{DECterm} (which are different from the \cw{xterm} ones;
387 PuTTY supports both).
388
389 By default, PuTTY announces its terminal type to the server as
390 \c{xterm}. If you have a problem with this, you can reconfigure it
391 to say something else; \c{vt220} might help if you have trouble.
392
393 \S{faq-settings}{Question} Where does PuTTY store its data?
394
395 On Windows, PuTTY stores most of its data (saved sessions, SSH host
396 keys) in the \i{Registry}. The precise location is
397
398 \c HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\SimonTatham\PuTTY
399
400 and within that area, saved sessions are stored under \c{Sessions}
401 while host keys are stored under \c{SshHostKeys}.
402
403 PuTTY also requires a random number seed file, to improve the
404 unpredictability of randomly chosen data needed as part of the SSH
405 cryptography. This is stored by default in a file called \i\c{PUTTY.RND};
406 this is stored by default in the \q{Application Data} directory,
407 or failing that, one of a number of fallback locations. If you
408 want to change the location of the random number seed file, you can
409 put your chosen pathname in the Registry, at
410
411 \c HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\SimonTatham\PuTTY\RandSeedFile
412
413 You can ask PuTTY to delete all this data; see \k{faq-cleanup}.
414
415 On Unix, PuTTY stores all of this data in a directory \cw{~/.putty}.
416
417 \H{faq-howto} HOWTO questions
418
419 \S{faq-login}{Question} What login name / password should I use?
420
421 This is not a question you should be asking \e{us}.
422
423 PuTTY is a communications tool, for making connections to other
424 computers. We maintain the tool; we \e{don't} administer any computers
425 that you're likely to be able to use, in the same way that the people
426 who make web browsers aren't responsible for most of the content you can
427 view in them. \#{FIXME: less technical analogy?} We cannot help with
428 questions of this sort.
429
430 If you know the name of the computer you want to connect to, but don't
431 know what login name or password to use, you should talk to whoever
432 administers that computer. If you don't know who that is, see the next
433 question for some possible ways to find out.
434
435 \# FIXME: some people ask us to provide them with a login name
436 apparently as random members of the public rather than in the
437 belief that we run a server belonging to an organisation they already
438 have some relationship with. Not sure what to say to such people.
439
440 \S{faq-commands}{Question} \I{commands on the server}What commands
441 can I type into my PuTTY terminal window?
442
443 Again, this is not a question you should be asking \e{us}. You need
444 to read the manuals, or ask the administrator, of \e{the computer
445 you have connected to}.
446
447 PuTTY does not process the commands you type into it. It's only a
448 communications tool. It makes a connection to another computer; it
449 passes the commands you type to that other computer; and it passes
450 the other computer's responses back to you. Therefore, the precise
451 range of commands you can use will not depend on PuTTY, but on what
452 kind of computer you have connected to and what software is running
453 on it. The PuTTY team cannot help you with that.
454
455 (Think of PuTTY as being a bit like a telephone. If you phone
456 somebody up and you don't know what language to speak to make them
457 understand you, it isn't \e{the telephone company}'s job to find
458 that out for you. We just provide the means for you to get in touch;
459 making yourself understood is somebody else's problem.)
460
461 If you are unsure of where to start looking for the administrator of
462 your server, a good place to start might be to remember how you
463 found out the host name in the PuTTY configuration. If you were
464 given that host name by e-mail, for example, you could try asking
465 the person who sent you that e-mail. If your company's IT department
466 provided you with ready-made PuTTY saved sessions, then that IT
467 department can probably also tell you something about what commands
468 you can type during those sessions. But the PuTTY maintainer team
469 does not administer any server you are likely to be connecting to,
470 and cannot help you with questions of this type.
471
472 \S{faq-startmax}{Question} How can I make PuTTY start up \i{maximise}d?
473
474 Create a Windows shortcut to start PuTTY from, and set it as \q{Run
475 Maximized}.
476
477 \S{faq-startsess}{Question} How can I create a \i{Windows shortcut} to
478 start a particular saved session directly?
479
480 To run a PuTTY session saved under the name \q{\cw{mysession}},
481 create a Windows shortcut that invokes PuTTY with a command line
482 like
483
484 \c \path\name\to\putty.exe -load "mysession"
485
486 (Note: prior to 0.53, the syntax was \c{@session}. This is now
487 deprecated and may be removed at some point.)
488
489 \S{faq-startssh}{Question} How can I start an SSH session straight
490 from the command line?
491
492 Use the command line \c{putty -ssh host.name}. Alternatively, create
493 a saved session that specifies the SSH protocol, and start the saved
494 session as shown in \k{faq-startsess}.
495
496 \S{faq-cutpaste}{Question} How do I \i{copy and paste} between PuTTY and
497 other Windows applications?
498
499 Copy and paste works similarly to the X Window System. You use the
500 left mouse button to select text in the PuTTY window. The act of
501 selection \e{automatically} copies the text to the clipboard: there
502 is no need to press Ctrl-Ins or Ctrl-C or anything else. In fact,
503 pressing Ctrl-C will send a Ctrl-C character to the other end of
504 your connection (just like it does the rest of the time), which may
505 have unpleasant effects. The \e{only} thing you need to do, to copy
506 text to the clipboard, is to select it.
507
508 To paste the clipboard contents into a PuTTY window, by default you
509 click the right mouse button. If you have a three-button mouse and
510 are used to X applications, you can configure pasting to be done by
511 the middle button instead, but this is not the default because most
512 Windows users don't have a middle button at all.
513
514 You can also paste by pressing Shift-Ins.
515
516 \S{faq-options}{Question} How do I use all PuTTY's features (public
517 keys, proxying, cipher selection, etc.) in PSCP, PSFTP and Plink?
518
519 Most major features (e.g., public keys, port forwarding) are available
520 through command line options. See the documentation.
521
522 Not all features are accessible from the command line yet, although
523 we'd like to fix this. In the meantime, you can use most of
524 PuTTY's features if you create a PuTTY saved session, and then use
525 the name of the saved session on the command line in place of a
526 hostname. This works for PSCP, PSFTP and Plink (but don't expect
527 port forwarding in the file transfer applications!).
528
529 \S{faq-pscp}{Question} How do I use PSCP.EXE? When I double-click it
530 gives me a command prompt window which then closes instantly.
531
532 PSCP is a command-line application, not a GUI application. If you
533 run it without arguments, it will simply print a help message and
534 terminate.
535
536 To use PSCP properly, run it from a Command Prompt window. See
537 \k{pscp} in the documentation for more details.
538
539 \S{faq-pscp-spaces}{Question} \I{spaces in filenames}How do I use
540 PSCP to copy a file whose name has spaces in?
541
542 If PSCP is using the traditional SCP protocol, this is confusing. If
543 you're specifying a file at the local end, you just use one set of
544 quotes as you would normally do:
545
546 \c pscp "local filename with spaces" user@host:
547 \c pscp user@host:myfile "local filename with spaces"
548
549 But if the filename you're specifying is on the \e{remote} side, you
550 have to use backslashes and two sets of quotes:
551
552 \c pscp user@host:"\"remote filename with spaces\"" local_filename
553 \c pscp local_filename user@host:"\"remote filename with spaces\""
554
555 Worse still, in a remote-to-local copy you have to specify the local
556 file name explicitly, otherwise PSCP will complain that they don't
557 match (unless you specified the \c{-unsafe} option). The following
558 command will give an error message:
559
560 \c c:\>pscp user@host:"\"oo er\"" .
561 \c warning: remote host tried to write to a file called 'oo er'
562 \c when we requested a file called '"oo er"'.
563
564 Instead, you need to specify the local file name in full:
565
566 \c c:\>pscp user@host:"\"oo er\"" "oo er"
567
568 If PSCP is using the newer SFTP protocol, none of this is a problem,
569 and all filenames with spaces in are specified using a single pair
570 of quotes in the obvious way:
571
572 \c pscp "local file" user@host:
573 \c pscp user@host:"remote file" .
574
575 \H{faq-trouble} Troubleshooting
576
577 \S{faq-incorrect-mac}{Question} Why do I see \q{Incorrect MAC
578 received on packet}?
579
580 One possible cause of this that used to be common is a bug in old
581 SSH-2 servers distributed by \cw{ssh.com}. (This is not the only
582 possible cause; see \k{errors-crc} in the documentation.)
583 Version 2.3.0 and below of their SSH-2 server
584 constructs Message Authentication Codes in the wrong way, and
585 expects the client to construct them in the same wrong way. PuTTY
586 constructs the MACs correctly by default, and hence these old
587 servers will fail to work with it.
588
589 If you are using PuTTY version 0.52 or better, this should work
590 automatically: PuTTY should detect the buggy servers from their
591 version number announcement, and automatically start to construct
592 its MACs in the same incorrect manner as they do, so it will be able
593 to work with them.
594
595 If you are using PuTTY version 0.51 or below, you can enable the
596 workaround by going to the SSH panel and ticking the box labelled
597 \q{Imitate SSH2 MAC bug}. It's possible that you might have to do
598 this with 0.52 as well, if a buggy server exists that PuTTY doesn't
599 know about.
600
601 In this context MAC stands for \ii{Message Authentication Code}. It's a
602 cryptographic term, and it has nothing at all to do with Ethernet
603 MAC (Media Access Control) addresses.
604
605 \S{faq-pscp-protocol}{Question} Why do I see \q{Fatal: Protocol
606 error: Expected control record} in PSCP?
607
608 This happens because PSCP was expecting to see data from the server
609 that was part of the PSCP protocol exchange, and instead it saw data
610 that it couldn't make any sense of at all.
611
612 This almost always happens because the \i{startup scripts} in your
613 account on the server machine are generating output. This is
614 impossible for PSCP, or any other SCP client, to work around. You
615 should never use startup files (\c{.bashrc}, \c{.cshrc} and so on)
616 which generate output in non-interactive sessions.
617
618 This is not actually a PuTTY problem. If PSCP fails in this way,
619 then all other SCP clients are likely to fail in exactly the same
620 way. The problem is at the server end.
621
622 \S{faq-colours}{Question} I clicked on a colour in the \ii{Colours}
623 panel, and the colour didn't change in my terminal.
624
625 That isn't how you're supposed to use the Colours panel.
626
627 During the course of a session, PuTTY potentially uses \e{all} the
628 colours listed in the Colours panel. It's not a question of using
629 only one of them and you choosing which one; PuTTY will use them
630 \e{all}. The purpose of the Colours panel is to let you adjust the
631 appearance of all the colours. So to change the colour of the
632 cursor, for example, you would select \q{Cursor Colour}, press the
633 \q{Modify} button, and select a new colour from the dialog box that
634 appeared. Similarly, if you want your session to appear in green,
635 you should select \q{Default Foreground} and press \q{Modify}.
636 Clicking on \q{ANSI Green} won't turn your session green; it will
637 only allow you to adjust the \e{shade} of green used when PuTTY is
638 instructed by the server to display green text.
639
640 \S{faq-winsock2}{Question} Plink on \i{Windows 95} says it can't find
641 \i\cw{WS2_32.DLL}.
642
643 Plink requires the extended Windows network library, WinSock version
644 2. This is installed as standard on Windows 98 and above, and on
645 Windows NT, and even on later versions of Windows 95; but early
646 Win95 installations don't have it.
647
648 In order to use Plink on these systems, you will need to download
649 the
650 \W{http://www.microsoft.com/windows95/downloads/contents/wuadmintools/s_wunetworkingtools/w95sockets2/}{WinSock 2 upgrade}:
651
652 \c http://www.microsoft.com/windows95/downloads/contents/
653 \c wuadmintools/s_wunetworkingtools/w95sockets2/
654
655 \S{faq-outofmem}{Question} After trying to establish an SSH-2
656 connection, PuTTY says \q{\ii{Out of memory}} and dies.
657
658 If this happens just while the connection is starting up, this often
659 indicates that for some reason the client and server have failed to
660 establish a session encryption key. Somehow, they have performed
661 calculations that should have given each of them the same key, but
662 have ended up with different keys; so data encrypted by one and
663 decrypted by the other looks like random garbage.
664
665 This causes an \q{out of memory} error because the first encrypted
666 data PuTTY expects to see is the length of an SSH message. Normally
667 this will be something well under 100 bytes. If the decryption has
668 failed, PuTTY will see a completely random length in the region of
669 two \e{gigabytes}, and will try to allocate enough memory to store
670 this non-existent message. This will immediately lead to it thinking
671 it doesn't have enough memory, and panicking.
672
673 If this happens to you, it is quite likely to still be a PuTTY bug
674 and you should report it (although it might be a bug in your SSH
675 server instead); but it doesn't necessarily mean you've actually run
676 out of memory.
677
678 \S{faq-outofmem2}{Question} When attempting a file transfer, either
679 PSCP or PSFTP says \q{\ii{Out of memory}} and dies.
680
681 This is almost always caused by your \i{login scripts} on the server
682 generating output. PSCP or PSFTP will receive that output when they
683 were expecting to see the start of a file transfer protocol, and
684 they will attempt to interpret the output as file-transfer protocol.
685 This will usually lead to an \q{out of memory} error for much the
686 same reasons as given in \k{faq-outofmem}.
687
688 This is a setup problem in your account on your server, \e{not} a
689 PSCP/PSFTP bug. Your login scripts should \e{never} generate output
690 during non-interactive sessions; secure file transfer is not the
691 only form of remote access that will break if they do.
692
693 On Unix, a simple fix is to ensure that all the parts of your login
694 script that might generate output are in \c{.profile} (if you use a
695 Bourne shell derivative) or \c{.login} (if you use a C shell).
696 Putting them in more general files such as \c{.bashrc} or \c{.cshrc}
697 is liable to lead to problems.
698
699 \S{faq-psftp-slow}{Question} PSFTP transfers files much slower than PSCP.
700
701 The throughput of PSFTP 0.54 should be much better than 0.53b and
702 prior; we've added code to the SFTP backend to queue several blocks
703 of data rather than waiting for an acknowledgement for each. (The
704 SCP backend did not suffer from this performance issue because SCP
705 is a much simpler protocol.)
706
707 \S{faq-bce}{Question} When I run full-colour applications, I see
708 areas of black space where colour ought to be, or vice versa.
709
710 You almost certainly need to change the \q{Use \i{background colour} to
711 erase screen} setting in the Terminal panel. If there is too much
712 black space (the commoner situation), you should enable it, while if
713 there is too much colour, you should disable it. (See \k{config-erase}.)
714
715 In old versions of PuTTY, this was disabled by default, and would not
716 take effect until you reset the terminal (see \k{faq-resetterm}).
717 Since 0.54, it is enabled by default, and changes take effect
718 immediately.
719
720 \S{faq-resetterm}{Question} When I change some terminal settings,
721 nothing happens.
722
723 Some of the terminal options (notably \ii{Auto Wrap} and
724 background-colour screen erase) actually represent the \e{default}
725 setting, rather than the currently active setting. The server can
726 send sequences that modify these options in mid-session, but when
727 the terminal is reset (by server action, or by you choosing \q{Reset
728 Terminal} from the System menu) the defaults are restored.
729
730 In versions 0.53b and prior, if you change one of these options in
731 the middle of a session, you will find that the change does not
732 immediately take effect. It will only take effect once you reset
733 the terminal.
734
735 In version 0.54, the behaviour has changed - changes to these
736 settings take effect immediately.
737
738 \S{faq-idleout}{Question} My PuTTY sessions unexpectedly close after
739 they are \I{idle connections}idle for a while.
740
741 Some types of \i{firewall}, and almost any router doing Network Address
742 Translation (\i{NAT}, also known as IP masquerading), will forget about
743 a connection through them if the connection does nothing for too
744 long. This will cause the connection to be rudely cut off when
745 contact is resumed.
746
747 You can try to combat this by telling PuTTY to send \e{keepalives}:
748 packets of data which have no effect on the actual session, but
749 which reassure the router or firewall that the network connection is
750 still active and worth remembering about.
751
752 Keepalives don't solve everything, unfortunately; although they
753 cause greater robustness against this sort of router, they can also
754 cause a \e{loss} of robustness against network dropouts. See
755 \k{config-keepalive} in the documentation for more discussion of
756 this.
757
758 \S{faq-timeout}{Question} PuTTY's network connections time out too
759 quickly when \I{breaks in connectivity}network connectivity is
760 temporarily lost.
761
762 This is a Windows problem, not a PuTTY problem. The timeout value
763 can't be set on per application or per session basis. To increase
764 the TCP timeout globally, you need to tinker with the Registry.
765
766 On Windows 95, 98 or ME, the registry key you need to create or
767 change is
768
769 \c HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\System\CurrentControlSet\Services\VxD\
770 \c MSTCP\MaxDataRetries
771
772 (it must be of type DWORD in Win95, or String in Win98/ME).
773 (See MS Knowledge Base article
774 \W{http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;en-us;158474}{158474}
775 for more information.)
776
777 On Windows NT, 2000, or XP, the registry key to create or change is
778
779 \c HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\Tcpip\
780 \c Parameters\TcpMaxDataRetransmissions
781
782 and it must be of type DWORD.
783 (See MS Knowledge Base articles
784 \W{http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;en-us;120642}{120642}
785 and
786 \W{http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;en-us;314053}{314053}
787 for more information.)
788
789 Set the key's value to something like 10. This will cause Windows to
790 try harder to keep connections alive instead of abandoning them.
791
792 \S{faq-puttyputty}{Question} When I \cw{cat} a binary file, I get
793 \q{PuTTYPuTTYPuTTY} on my command line.
794
795 Don't do that, then.
796
797 This is designed behaviour; when PuTTY receives the character
798 Control-E from the remote server, it interprets it as a request to
799 identify itself, and so it sends back the string \q{\cw{PuTTY}} as
800 if that string had been entered at the keyboard. Control-E should
801 only be sent by programs that are prepared to deal with the
802 response. Writing a binary file to your terminal is likely to output
803 many Control-E characters, and cause this behaviour. Don't do it.
804 It's a bad plan.
805
806 To mitigate the effects, you could configure the answerback string
807 to be empty (see \k{config-answerback}); but writing binary files to
808 your terminal is likely to cause various other unpleasant behaviour,
809 so this is only a small remedy.
810
811 \S{faq-wintitle}{Question} When I \cw{cat} a binary file, my \i{window
812 title} changes to a nonsense string.
813
814 Don't do that, then.
815
816 It is designed behaviour that PuTTY should have the ability to
817 adjust the window title on instructions from the server. Normally
818 the control sequence that does this should only be sent
819 deliberately, by programs that know what they are doing and intend
820 to put meaningful text in the window title. Writing a binary file to
821 your terminal runs the risk of sending the same control sequence by
822 accident, and cause unexpected changes in the window title. Don't do
823 it.
824
825 \S{faq-password-fails}{Question} My \i{keyboard} stops working once
826 PuTTY displays the \i{password prompt}.
827
828 No, it doesn't. PuTTY just doesn't display the password you type, so
829 that someone looking at your screen can't see what it is.
830
831 Unlike the Windows login prompts, PuTTY doesn't display the password
832 as a row of asterisks either. This is so that someone looking at
833 your screen can't even tell how \e{long} your password is, which
834 might be valuable information.
835
836 \S{faq-keyboard}{Question} One or more \I{keyboard}\i{function keys}
837 don't do what I expected in a server-side application.
838
839 If you've already tried all the relevant options in the PuTTY
840 Keyboard panel, you may need to mail the PuTTY maintainers and ask.
841
842 It is \e{not} usually helpful just to tell us which application,
843 which server operating system, and which key isn't working; in order
844 to replicate the problem we would need to have a copy of every
845 operating system, and every application, that anyone has ever
846 complained about.
847
848 PuTTY responds to function key presses by sending a sequence of
849 control characters to the server. If a function key isn't doing what
850 you expect, it's likely that the character sequence your application
851 is expecting to receive is not the same as the one PuTTY is sending.
852 Therefore what we really need to know is \e{what} sequence the
853 application is expecting.
854
855 The simplest way to investigate this is to find some other terminal
856 environment, in which that function key \e{does} work; and then
857 investigate what sequence the function key is sending in that
858 situation. One reasonably easy way to do this on a \i{Unix} system is to
859 type the command \i\c{cat}, and then press the function key. This is
860 likely to produce output of the form \c{^[[11~}. You can also do
861 this in PuTTY, to find out what sequence the function key is
862 producing in that. Then you can mail the PuTTY maintainers and tell
863 us \q{I wanted the F1 key to send \c{^[[11~}, but instead it's
864 sending \c{^[OP}, can this be done?}, or something similar.
865
866 You should still read the
867 \W{http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/feedback.html}{Feedback
868 page} on the PuTTY website (also provided as \k{feedback} in the
869 manual), and follow the guidelines contained in that.
870
871 \S{faq-openssh-bad-openssl}{Question} Since my SSH server was upgraded
872 to \i{OpenSSH} 3.1p1/3.4p1, I can no longer connect with PuTTY.
873
874 There is a known problem when OpenSSH has been built against an
875 incorrect version of OpenSSL; the quick workaround is to configure
876 PuTTY to use SSH protocol 2 and the Blowfish cipher.
877
878 For more details and OpenSSH patches, see
879 \W{http://bugzilla.mindrot.org/show_bug.cgi?id=138}{bug 138} in the
880 OpenSSH BTS.
881
882 This is not a PuTTY-specific problem; if you try to connect with
883 another client you'll likely have similar problems. (Although PuTTY's
884 default cipher differs from many other clients.)
885
886 \e{OpenSSH 3.1p1:} configurations known to be broken (and symptoms):
887
888 \b SSH-2 with AES cipher (PuTTY says \q{Assertion failed! Expression:
889 (len & 15) == 0} in \cw{sshaes.c}, or \q{Out of memory}, or crashes)
890
891 \b SSH-2 with 3DES (PuTTY says \q{Incorrect MAC received on packet})
892
893 \b SSH-1 with Blowfish (PuTTY says \q{Incorrect CRC received on
894 packet})
895
896 \b SSH-1 with 3DES
897
898 \e{OpenSSH 3.4p1:} as of 3.4p1, only the problem with SSH-1 and
899 Blowfish remains. Rebuild your server, apply the patch linked to from
900 bug 138 above, or use another cipher (e.g., 3DES) instead.
901
902 \e{Other versions:} we occasionally get reports of the same symptom
903 and workarounds with older versions of OpenSSH, although it's not
904 clear the underlying cause is the same.
905
906 \S{faq-ssh2key-ssh1conn}{Question} Why do I see \q{Couldn't load
907 private key from ...}? Why can PuTTYgen load my key but not PuTTY?
908
909 It's likely that you've generated an SSH protocol 2 key with PuTTYgen,
910 but you're trying to use it in an SSH-1 connection. SSH-1 and SSH-2 keys
911 have different formats, and (at least in 0.52) PuTTY's reporting of a
912 key in the wrong format isn't optimal.
913
914 To connect using SSH-2 to a server that supports both versions, you
915 need to change the configuration from the default (see \k{faq-ssh2}).
916
917 \S{faq-rh8-utf8}{Question} When I'm connected to a \i{Red Hat Linux} 8.0
918 system, some characters don't display properly.
919
920 A common complaint is that hyphens in man pages show up as a-acute.
921
922 With release 8.0, Red Hat appear to have made \i{UTF-8} the default
923 character set. There appears to be no way for terminal emulators such
924 as PuTTY to know this (as far as we know, the appropriate escape
925 sequence to switch into UTF-8 mode isn't sent).
926
927 A fix is to configure sessions to RH8 systems to use UTF-8
928 translation - see \k{config-charset} in the documentation. (Note that
929 if you use \q{Change Settings}, changes may not take place immediately
930 - see \k{faq-resetterm}.)
931
932 If you really want to change the character set used by the server, the
933 right place is \c{/etc/sysconfig/i18n}, but this shouldn't be
934 necessary.
935
936 \S{faq-screen}{Question} Since I upgraded to PuTTY 0.54, the
937 scrollback has stopped working when I run \c{screen}.
938
939 PuTTY's terminal emulator has always had the policy that when the
940 \q{\i{alternate screen}} is in use, nothing is added to the scrollback.
941 This is because the usual sorts of programs which use the alternate
942 screen are things like text editors, which tend to scroll back and
943 forth in the same document a lot; so (a) they would fill up the
944 scrollback with a large amount of unhelpfully disordered text, and
945 (b) they contain their \e{own} method for the user to scroll back to
946 the bit they were interested in. We have generally found this policy
947 to do the Right Thing in almost all situations.
948
949 Unfortunately, \c{screen} is one exception: it uses the alternate
950 screen, but it's still usually helpful to have PuTTY's scrollback
951 continue working. The simplest solution is to go to the Features
952 control panel and tick \q{Disable switching to alternate terminal
953 screen}. (See \k{config-features-altscreen} for more details.)
954 Alternatively, you can tell \c{screen} itself not to use the
955 alternate screen: the
956 \W{http://www4.informatik.uni-erlangen.de/~jnweiger/screen-faq.html}{\c{screen}
957 FAQ} suggests adding the line \cq{termcapinfo xterm ti@:te@} to your
958 \cw{.screenrc} file.
959
960 The reason why this only started to be a problem in 0.54 is because
961 \c{screen} typically uses an unusual control sequence to switch to
962 the alternate screen, and previous versions of PuTTY did not support
963 this sequence.
964
965 \S{faq-alternate-localhost}{Question} Since I upgraded \i{Windows XP}
966 to Service Pack 2, I can't use addresses like \cw{127.0.0.2}.
967
968 Some people who ask PuTTY to listen on \i{localhost} addresses other
969 than \cw{127.0.0.1} to forward services such as \i{SMB} and \i{Windows
970 Terminal Services} have found that doing so no longer works since
971 they upgraded to WinXP SP2.
972
973 This is apparently an issue with SP2 that is acknowledged by Microsoft
974 in MS Knowledge Base article
975 \W{http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;en-us;884020}{884020}.
976 The article links to a fix you can download.
977
978 (\e{However}, we've been told that SP2 \e{also} fixes the bug that
979 means you need to use non-\cw{127.0.0.1} addresses to forward
980 Terminal Services in the first place.)
981
982 \S{faq-missing-slash}{Question} PSFTP commands seem to be missing a
983 directory separator (slash).
984
985 Some people have reported the following incorrect behaviour with
986 PSFTP:
987
988 \c psftp> pwd
989 \e iii
990 \c Remote directory is /dir1/dir2
991 \c psftp> get filename.ext
992 \e iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
993 \c /dir1/dir2filename.ext: no such file or directory
994
995 This is not a bug in PSFTP. There is a known bug in some versions of
996 portable \i{OpenSSH}
997 (\W{http://bugzilla.mindrot.org/show_bug.cgi?id=697}{bug 697}) that
998 causes these symptoms; it appears to have been introduced around
999 3.7.x. It manifests only on certain platforms (AIX is what has been
1000 reported to us).
1001
1002 There is a patch for OpenSSH attached to that bug; it's also fixed in
1003 recent versions of portable OpenSSH (from around 3.8).
1004
1005 \S{faq-connaborted}{Question} Do you want to hear about \q{Software
1006 caused connection abort}?
1007
1008 In the documentation for PuTTY 0.53 and 0.53b, we mentioned that we'd
1009 like to hear about any occurrences of this error. Since the release
1010 of PuTTY 0.54, however, we've been convinced that this error doesn't
1011 indicate that PuTTY's doing anything wrong, and we don't need to hear
1012 about further occurrences. See \k{errors-connaborted} for our current
1013 documentation of this error.
1014
1015 \S{faq-rekey}{Question} My SSH-2 session \I{locking up, SSH-2
1016 sessions}locks up for a few seconds every so often.
1017
1018 Recent versions of PuTTY automatically initiate \i{repeat key
1019 exchange} once per hour, to improve session security. If your client
1020 or server machine is slow, you may experience this as a delay of
1021 anything up to thirty seconds or so.
1022
1023 These \I{delays, in SSH-2 sessions}delays are inconvenient, but they
1024 are there for your protection. If they really cause you a problem,
1025 you can choose to turn off periodic rekeying using the \q{Kex}
1026 configuration panel (see \k{config-ssh-kex}), but be aware that you
1027 will be sacrificing security for this. (Falling back to SSH-1 would
1028 also remove the delays, but would lose a \e{lot} more security
1029 still. We do not recommend it.)
1030
1031 \S{faq-xpwontrun}{Question} PuTTY fails to start up. Windows claims that
1032 \q{the application configuration is incorrect}.
1033
1034 This is caused by a bug in certain versions of \i{Windows XP} which
1035 is triggered by PuTTY 0.58. This was fixed in 0.59. The
1036 \W{http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/wishlist/xp-wont-run}{\q{xp-wont-run}}
1037 entry in PuTTY's wishlist has more details.
1038
1039 \H{faq-secure} Security questions
1040
1041 \S{faq-publicpc}{Question} Is it safe for me to download PuTTY and
1042 use it on a public PC?
1043
1044 It depends on whether you trust that PC. If you don't trust the
1045 public PC, don't use PuTTY on it, and don't use any other software
1046 you plan to type passwords into either. It might be watching your
1047 keystrokes, or it might tamper with the PuTTY binary you download.
1048 There is \e{no} program safe enough that you can run it on an
1049 actively malicious PC and get away with typing passwords into it.
1050
1051 If you do trust the PC, then it's probably OK to use PuTTY on it
1052 (but if you don't trust the network, then the PuTTY download might
1053 be tampered with, so it would be better to carry PuTTY with you on a
1054 floppy).
1055
1056 \S{faq-cleanup}{Question} What does PuTTY leave on a system? How can
1057 I \i{clean up} after it?
1058
1059 PuTTY will leave some Registry entries, and a random seed file, on
1060 the PC (see \k{faq-settings}). If you are using PuTTY on a public
1061 PC, or somebody else's PC, you might want to clean these up when you
1062 leave. You can do that automatically, by running the command
1063 \c{putty -cleanup}. (Note that this only removes settings for
1064 the currently logged-in user on \i{multi-user systems}.)
1065
1066 If PuTTY was installed from the installer package, it will also
1067 appear in \q{Add/Remove Programs}. Older versions of the uninstaller
1068 do not remove the above-mentioned registry entries and file.
1069
1070 \S{faq-dsa}{Question} How come PuTTY now supports \i{DSA}, when the
1071 website used to say how insecure it was?
1072
1073 DSA has a major weakness \e{if badly implemented}: it relies on a
1074 random number generator to far too great an extent. If the random
1075 number generator produces a number an attacker can predict, the DSA
1076 private key is exposed - meaning that the attacker can log in as you
1077 on all systems that accept that key.
1078
1079 The PuTTY policy changed because the developers were informed of
1080 ways to implement DSA which do not suffer nearly as badly from this
1081 weakness, and indeed which don't need to rely on random numbers at
1082 all. For this reason we now believe PuTTY's DSA implementation is
1083 probably OK. However, if you have the choice, we still recommend you
1084 use RSA instead.
1085
1086 \S{faq-virtuallock}{Question} Couldn't Pageant use
1087 \cw{VirtualLock()} to stop private keys being written to disk?
1088
1089 Unfortunately not. The \cw{VirtualLock()} function in the Windows
1090 API doesn't do a proper job: it may prevent small pieces of a
1091 process's memory from being paged to disk while the process is
1092 running, but it doesn't stop the process's memory as a whole from
1093 being swapped completely out to disk when the process is long-term
1094 inactive. And Pageant spends most of its time inactive.
1095
1096 \H{faq-admin} Administrative questions
1097
1098 \S{faq-domain}{Question} Would you like me to register you a nicer
1099 domain name?
1100
1101 No, thank you. Even if you can find one (most of them seem to have
1102 been registered already, by people who didn't ask whether we
1103 actually wanted it before they applied), we're happy with the PuTTY
1104 web site being exactly where it is. It's not hard to find (just type
1105 \q{putty} into \W{http://www.google.com/}{google.com} and we're the
1106 first link returned), and we don't believe the administrative hassle
1107 of moving the site would be worth the benefit.
1108
1109 In addition, if we \e{did} want a custom domain name, we would want
1110 to run it ourselves, so we knew for certain that it would continue
1111 to point where we wanted it, and wouldn't suddenly change or do
1112 strange things. Having it registered for us by a third party who we
1113 don't even know is not the best way to achieve this.
1114
1115 \S{faq-webhosting}{Question} Would you like free web hosting for the
1116 PuTTY web site?
1117
1118 We already have some, thanks.
1119
1120 \S{faq-link}{Question} Would you link to my web site from the PuTTY
1121 web site?
1122
1123 Only if the content of your web page is of definite direct interest
1124 to PuTTY users. If your content is unrelated, or only tangentially
1125 related, to PuTTY, then the link would simply be advertising for
1126 you.
1127
1128 One very nice effect of the Google ranking mechanism is that by and
1129 large, the most popular web sites get the highest rankings. This
1130 means that when an ordinary person does a search, the top item in
1131 the search is very likely to be a high-quality site or the site they
1132 actually wanted, rather than the site which paid the most money for
1133 its ranking.
1134
1135 The PuTTY web site is held in high esteem by Google, for precisely
1136 this reason: lots of people have linked to it simply because they
1137 like PuTTY, without us ever having to ask anyone to link to us. We
1138 feel that it would be an abuse of this esteem to use it to boost the
1139 ranking of random advertisers' web sites. If you want your web site
1140 to have a high Google ranking, we'd prefer that you achieve this the
1141 way we did - by being good enough at what you do that people will
1142 link to you simply because they like you.
1143
1144 In particular, we aren't interested in trading links for money (see
1145 above), and we \e{certainly} aren't interested in trading links for
1146 other links (since we have no advertising on our web site, our
1147 Google ranking is not even directly worth anything to us). If we
1148 don't want to link to you for free, then we probably won't want to
1149 link to you at all.
1150
1151 If you have software based on PuTTY, or specifically designed to
1152 interoperate with PuTTY, or in some other way of genuine interest to
1153 PuTTY users, then we will probably be happy to add a link to you on
1154 our Links page. And if you're running a particularly valuable mirror
1155 of the PuTTY web site, we might be interested in linking to you from
1156 our Mirrors page.
1157
1158 \S{faq-sourceforge}{Question} Why don't you move PuTTY to
1159 SourceForge?
1160
1161 Partly, because we don't want to move the web site location (see
1162 \k{faq-domain}).
1163
1164 Also, security reasons. PuTTY is a security product, and as such it
1165 is particularly important to guard the code and the web site against
1166 unauthorised modifications which might introduce subtle security
1167 flaws. Therefore, we prefer that the Subversion repository, web site and
1168 FTP site remain where they are, under the direct control of system
1169 administrators we know and trust personally, rather than being run
1170 by a large organisation full of people we've never met and which is
1171 known to have had breakins in the past.
1172
1173 No offence to SourceForge; I think they do a wonderful job. But
1174 they're not ideal for everyone, and in particular they're not ideal
1175 for us.
1176
1177 \S{faq-mailinglist1}{Question} Why can't I subscribe to the
1178 putty-bugs mailing list?
1179
1180 Because you're not a member of the PuTTY core development team. The
1181 putty-bugs mailing list is not a general newsgroup-like discussion
1182 forum; it's a contact address for the core developers, and an
1183 \e{internal} mailing list for us to discuss things among ourselves.
1184 If we opened it up for everybody to subscribe to, it would turn into
1185 something more like a newsgroup and we would be completely
1186 overwhelmed by the volume of traffic. It's hard enough to keep up
1187 with the list as it is.
1188
1189 \S{faq-mailinglist2}{Question} If putty-bugs isn't a
1190 general-subscription mailing list, what is?
1191
1192 There isn't one, that we know of.
1193
1194 If someone else wants to set up a mailing list or other forum for
1195 PuTTY users to help each other with common problems, that would be
1196 fine with us, though the PuTTY team would almost certainly not have the
1197 time to read it. It's probably better to use one of the established
1198 newsgroups for this purpose (see \k{feedback-other-fora}).
1199
1200 \S{faq-donations}{Question} How can I donate to PuTTY development?
1201
1202 Please, \e{please} don't feel you have to. PuTTY is completely free
1203 software, and not shareware. We think it's very important that
1204 \e{everybody} who wants to use PuTTY should be able to, whether they
1205 have any money or not; so the last thing we would want is for a
1206 PuTTY user to feel guilty because they haven't paid us any money. If
1207 you want to keep your money, please do keep it. We wouldn't dream of
1208 asking for any.
1209
1210 Having said all that, if you still really \e{want} to give us money,
1211 we won't argue :-) The easiest way for us to accept donations is if
1212 you send money to \cw{<anakin@pobox.com>} using PayPal
1213 (\W{http://www.paypal.com/}\cw{www.paypal.com}). If you don't like
1214 PayPal, talk to us; we can probably arrange some alternative means.
1215
1216 Small donations (tens of dollars or tens of euros) will probably be
1217 spent on beer or curry, which helps motivate our volunteer team to
1218 continue doing this for the world. Larger donations will be spent on
1219 something that actually helps development, if we can find anything
1220 (perhaps new hardware, or a copy of Windows XP), but if we can't
1221 find anything then we'll just distribute the money among the
1222 developers. If you want to be sure your donation is going towards
1223 something worthwhile, ask us first. If you don't like these terms,
1224 feel perfectly free not to donate. We don't mind.
1225
1226 \S{faq-permission}{Question} Can I have permission to put PuTTY on a
1227 cover disk / distribute it with other software / etc?
1228
1229 Yes. For most things, you need not bother asking us explicitly for
1230 permission; our licence already grants you permission.
1231
1232 See \k{feedback-permission} for more details.
1233
1234 \S{faq-indemnity}{Question} Can you sign an agreement indemnifying
1235 us against security problems in PuTTY?
1236
1237 No!
1238
1239 A vendor of physical security products (e.g. locks) might plausibly
1240 be willing to accept financial liability for a product that failed
1241 to perform as advertised and resulted in damage (e.g. valuables
1242 being stolen). The reason they can afford to do this is because they
1243 sell a \e{lot} of units, and only a small proportion of them will
1244 fail; so they can meet their financial liability out of the income
1245 from all the rest of their sales, and still have enough left over to
1246 make a profit. Financial liability is intrinsically linked to
1247 selling your product for money.
1248
1249 There are two reasons why PuTTY is not analogous to a physical lock
1250 in this context. One is that software products don't exhibit random
1251 variation: \e{if} PuTTY has a security hole (which does happen,
1252 although we do our utmost to prevent it and to respond quickly when
1253 it does), every copy of PuTTY will have the same hole, so it's
1254 likely to affect all the users at the same time. So even if our
1255 users were all paying us to use PuTTY, we wouldn't be able to
1256 \e{simultaneously} pay every affected user compensation in excess of
1257 the amount they had paid us in the first place. It just wouldn't
1258 work.
1259
1260 The second, much more important, reason is that PuTTY users
1261 \e{don't} pay us. The PuTTY team does not have an income; it's a
1262 volunteer effort composed of people spending their spare time to try
1263 to write useful software. We aren't even a company or any kind of
1264 legally recognised organisation. We're just a bunch of people who
1265 happen to do some stuff in our spare time.
1266
1267 Therefore, to ask us to assume financial liability is to ask us to
1268 assume a risk of having to pay it out of our own \e{personal}
1269 pockets: out of the same budget from which we buy food and clothes
1270 and pay our rent. That's more than we're willing to give. We're
1271 already giving a lot of our spare \e{time} to developing software
1272 for free; if we had to pay our own \e{money} to do it as well, we'd
1273 start to wonder why we were bothering.
1274
1275 Free software fundamentally does not work on the basis of financial
1276 guarantees. Your guarantee of the software functioning correctly is
1277 simply that you have the source code and can check it before you use
1278 it. If you want to be sure there aren't any security holes, do a
1279 security audit of the PuTTY code, or hire a security engineer if you
1280 don't have the necessary skills yourself: instead of trying to
1281 ensure you can get compensation in the event of a disaster, try to
1282 ensure there isn't a disaster in the first place.
1283
1284 If you \e{really} want financial security, see if you can find a
1285 security engineer who will take financial responsibility for the
1286 correctness of their review. (This might be less likely to suffer
1287 from the everything-failing-at-once problem mentioned above, because
1288 such an engineer would probably be reviewing a lot of \e{different}
1289 products which would tend to fail independently.) Failing that, see
1290 if you can persuade an insurance company to insure you against
1291 security incidents, and if the insurer demands it as a condition
1292 then get our code reviewed by a security engineer they're happy
1293 with.
1294
1295 \S{faq-permission-form}{Question} Can you sign this form granting us
1296 permission to use/distribute PuTTY?
1297
1298 If your form contains any clause along the lines of \q{the
1299 undersigned represents and warrants}, we're not going to sign it.
1300 This is particularly true if it asks us to warrant that PuTTY is
1301 secure; see \k{faq-indemnity} for more discussion of this. But it
1302 doesn't really matter what we're supposed to be warranting: even if
1303 it's something we already believe is true, such as that we don't
1304 infringe any third-party copyright, we will not sign a document
1305 accepting any legal or financial liability. This is simply because
1306 the PuTTY development project has no income out of which to satisfy
1307 that liability, or pay legal costs, should it become necessary. We
1308 cannot afford to be sued. We are assuring you that \e{we have done
1309 our best}; if that isn't good enough for you, tough.
1310
1311 The existing PuTTY licence document already gives you permission to
1312 use or distribute PuTTY in pretty much any way which does not
1313 involve pretending you wrote it or suing us if it goes wrong. We
1314 think that really ought to be enough for anybody.
1315
1316 See also \k{faq-permission-general} for another reason why we don't
1317 want to do this sort of thing.
1318
1319 \S{faq-permission-future}{Question} Can you write us a formal notice
1320 of permission to use PuTTY?
1321
1322 We could, in principle, but it isn't clear what use it would be. If
1323 you think there's a serious chance of one of the PuTTY copyright
1324 holders suing you (which we don't!), you would presumably want a
1325 signed notice from \e{all} of them; and we couldn't provide that
1326 even if we wanted to, because many of the copyright holders are
1327 people who contributed some code in the past and with whom we
1328 subsequently lost contact. Therefore the best we would be able to do
1329 \e{even in theory} would be to have the core development team sign
1330 the document, which wouldn't guarantee you that some other copyright
1331 holder might not sue.
1332
1333 See also \k{faq-permission-general} for another reason why we don't
1334 want to do this sort of thing.
1335
1336 \S{faq-permission-general}{Question} Can you sign \e{anything} for
1337 us?
1338
1339 Not unless there's an incredibly good reason.
1340
1341 We are generally unwilling to set a precedent that involves us
1342 having to enter into individual agreements with PuTTY users. We
1343 estimate that we have literally \e{millions} of users, and we
1344 absolutely would not have time to go round signing specific
1345 agreements with every one of them. So if you want us to sign
1346 something specific for you, you might usefully stop to consider
1347 whether there's anything special that distinguishes you from 999,999
1348 other users, and therefore any reason we should be willing to sign
1349 something for you without it setting such a precedent.
1350
1351 If your company policy requires you to have an individual agreement
1352 with the supplier of any software you use, then your company policy
1353 is simply not well suited to using popular free software, and we
1354 urge you to consider this as a flaw in your policy.
1355
1356 \S{faq-permission-assurance}{Question} If you won't sign anything,
1357 can you give us some sort of assurance that you won't make PuTTY
1358 closed-source in future?
1359
1360 Yes and no.
1361
1362 If what you want is an assurance that some \e{current version} of
1363 PuTTY which you've already downloaded will remain free, then you
1364 already have that assurance: it's called the PuTTY Licence. It
1365 grants you permission to use, distribute and copy the software to
1366 which it applies; once we've granted that permission (which we
1367 have), we can't just revoke it.
1368
1369 On the other hand, if you want an assurance that \e{future} versions
1370 of PuTTY won't be closed-source, that's more difficult. We could in
1371 principle sign a document stating that we would never release a
1372 closed-source PuTTY, but that wouldn't assure you that we \e{would}
1373 keep releasing \e{open}-source PuTTYs: we would still have the
1374 option of ceasing to develop PuTTY at all, which would surely be
1375 even worse for you than making it closed-source! (And we almost
1376 certainly wouldn't \e{want} to sign a document guaranteeing that we
1377 would actually continue to do development work on PuTTY; we
1378 certainly wouldn't sign it for free. Documents like that are called
1379 contracts of employment, and are generally not signed except in
1380 return for a sizeable salary.)
1381
1382 If we \e{were} to stop developing PuTTY, or to decide to make all
1383 future releases closed-source, then you would still be free to copy
1384 the last open release in accordance with the current licence, and in
1385 particular you could start your own fork of the project from that
1386 release. If this happened, I confidently predict that \e{somebody}
1387 would do that, and that some kind of a free PuTTY would continue to
1388 be developed. There's already precedent for that sort of thing
1389 happening in free software. We can't guarantee that somebody
1390 \e{other than you} would do it, of course; you might have to do it
1391 yourself. But we can assure you that there would be nothing
1392 \e{preventing} anyone from continuing free development if we
1393 stopped.
1394
1395 (Finally, we can also confidently predict that if we made PuTTY
1396 closed-source and someone made an open-source fork, most people
1397 would switch to the latter. Therefore, it would be pretty stupid of
1398 us to try it.)
1399
1400 \S{faq-export-cert}{Question} Can you provide us with export control
1401 information / FIPS certification for PuTTY?
1402
1403 Some people have asked us for an Export Control Classification Number
1404 (ECCN) for PuTTY. We don't know whether we have one, and as a team of
1405 free software developers based in the UK we don't have the time,
1406 money, or effort to deal with US bureaucracy to investigate any
1407 further. We believe that PuTTY falls under 5D002 on the US Commerce
1408 Control List, but that shouldn't be taken as definitive. If you need
1409 to know more you should seek professional legal advice. The same
1410 applies to any other country's legal requirements and restrictions.
1411
1412 Similarly, some people have asked us for FIPS certification of the
1413 PuTTY tools. Unless someone else is prepared to do the necessary work
1414 and pay any costs, we can't provide this.
1415
1416 \H{faq-misc} Miscellaneous questions
1417
1418 \S{faq-openssh}{Question} Is PuTTY a port of \i{OpenSSH}, or based on
1419 OpenSSH or OpenSSL?
1420
1421 No, it isn't. PuTTY is almost completely composed of code written
1422 from scratch for PuTTY. The only code we share with OpenSSH is the
1423 detector for SSH-1 CRC compensation attacks, written by CORE SDI
1424 S.A; we share no code at all with OpenSSL.
1425
1426 \S{faq-sillyputty}{Question} Where can I buy silly putty?
1427
1428 You're looking at the wrong web site; the only PuTTY we know about
1429 here is the name of a computer program.
1430
1431 If you want the kind of putty you can buy as an executive toy, the
1432 PuTTY team can personally recommend Thinking Putty, which you can
1433 buy from Crazy Aaron's Putty World, at
1434 \W{http://www.puttyworld.com}\cw{www.puttyworld.com}.
1435
1436 \S{faq-meaning}{Question} What does \q{PuTTY} mean?
1437
1438 It's the name of a popular SSH and Telnet client. Any other meaning
1439 is in the eye of the beholder. It's been rumoured that \q{PuTTY}
1440 is the antonym of \q{\cw{getty}}, or that it's the stuff that makes your
1441 Windows useful, or that it's a kind of plutonium Teletype. We
1442 couldn't possibly comment on such allegations.
1443
1444 \S{faq-pronounce}{Question} How do I pronounce \q{PuTTY}?
1445
1446 Exactly like the English word \q{putty}, which we pronounce
1447 /\u02C8{'}p\u028C{V}ti/.