e4eadb85df8b0dfcbc59556ada038b4943af6a31
[u/mdw/putty] / doc / faq.but
1 \versionid $Id: faq.but,v 1.27 2002/05/14 18:11:15 simon Exp $
2
3 \A{faq} PuTTY 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-support} Features supported in PuTTY
9
10 In general, if you want to know if PuTTY supports a particular
11 feature, you should look for it on the
12 \W{http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/}{PuTTY web site}.
13 In particular:
14
15 \b try the
16 \W{http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/changes.html}{changes
17 page}, and see if you can find the feature on there. If a feature is
18 listed there, it's been implemented. If it's listed as a change made
19 \e{since} the latest version, it should be available in the
20 development snapshots, in which case testing will be very welcome.
21
22 \b try the
23 \W{http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/wishlist.html}{Wishlist
24 page}, and see if you can find the feature there. If it's on there,
25 it probably \e{hasn't} been implemented.
26
27 \S{faq-ssh2}{Question} Does PuTTY support SSH v2?
28
29 Yes. SSH v2 support has been available in PuTTY since version 0.50.
30 However, currently the \e{default} SSH protocol is v1; to select SSH
31 v2 if your server supports both, go to the SSH panel and change the
32 \e{Preferred SSH protocol version} option.
33
34 Public key authentication (both RSA and DSA) in SSH v2 is new in
35 version 0.52.
36
37 \S{faq-ssh2-keyfmt}{Question} Does PuTTY support reading OpenSSH or
38 \cw{ssh.com} SSHv2 private key files?
39
40 Version 0.52 doesn't, but in the latest development snapshots
41 PuTTYgen can load OpenSSH and \cw{ssh.com} private keys, and save
42 OpenSSH private keys. We plan to add exporting of \cw{ssh.com} keys
43 as well.
44
45 \S{faq-ssh1}{Question} Does PuTTY support SSH v1?
46
47 Yes. SSH 1 support has always been available in PuTTY.
48
49 \S{faq-localecho}{Question} Does PuTTY support local echo?
50
51 Yes. Version 0.52 has proper support for local echo.
52
53 In version 0.51 and before, local echo could not be separated from
54 local line editing (where you type a line of text locally, and it is
55 not sent to the server until you press Return, so you have the
56 chance to edit it and correct mistakes \e{before} the server sees
57 it). New in version 0.52, local echo and local line editing are
58 separate options, and by default PuTTY will try to determine
59 automatically whether to enable them or not, based on which protocol
60 you have selected and also based on hints from the server. If you
61 have a problem with PuTTY's default choice, you can force each
62 option to be enabled or disabled as you choose. The controls are in
63 the Terminal panel, in the section marked \q{Line discipline
64 options}.
65
66 \S{faq-disksettings}{Question} Does PuTTY support storing its
67 settings in a disk file?
68
69 Not at present, although \k{config-file} in the documentation gives
70 a method of achieving the same effect.
71
72 \S{faq-fullscreen}{Question} Does PuTTY support full-screen mode,
73 like a DOS box?
74
75 Yes; this is a new feature in version 0.52.
76
77 \S{faq-password-remember}{Question} Does PuTTY have the ability to
78 remember my password so I don't have to type it every time?
79
80 No, it doesn't.
81
82 Remembering your password is a bad plan for obvious security
83 reasons: anyone who gains access to your machine while you're away
84 from your desk can find out the remembered password, and use it,
85 abuse it or change it.
86
87 In addition, it's not even \e{possible} for PuTTY to automatically
88 send your password in a Telnet session, because Telnet doesn't give
89 the client software any indication of which part of the login
90 process is the password prompt. PuTTY would have to guess, by
91 looking for words like \q{password} in the session data; and if your
92 login program is written in something other than English, this won't
93 work.
94
95 In SSH, remembering your password would be possible in theory, but
96 there doesn't seem to be much point since SSH supports public key
97 authentication, which is more flexible and more secure. See
98 \k{pubkey} in the documentation for a full discussion of public key
99 authentication.
100
101 \S{faq-hostkeys}{Question} Is there an option to turn off the
102 annoying host key prompts?
103
104 No, there isn't. And there won't be. Even if you write it yourself
105 and send us the patch, we won't accept it.
106
107 Those annoying host key prompts are the \e{whole point} of SSH.
108 Without them, all the cryptographic technology SSH uses to secure
109 your session is doing nothing more than making an attacker's job
110 slightly harder; instead of sitting between you and the server with
111 a packet sniffer, the attacker must actually subvert a router and
112 start modifying the packets going back and forth. But that's not all
113 that much harder than just sniffing; and without host key checking,
114 it will go completely undetected by client or server.
115
116 Host key checking is your guarantee that the encryption you put on
117 your data at the client end is the \e{same} encryption taken off the
118 data at the server end; it's your guarantee that it hasn't been
119 removed and replaced somewhere on the way. Host key checking makes
120 the attacker's job \e{astronomically} hard, compared to packet
121 sniffing, and even compared to subverting a router. Instead of
122 applying a little intelligence and keeping an eye on Bugtraq, the
123 attacker must now perform a brute-force attack against at least one
124 military-strength cipher. That insignificant host key prompt really
125 does make \e{that} much difference.
126
127 If you're having a specific problem with host key checking - perhaps
128 you want an automated batch job to make use of PSCP or Plink, and
129 the interactive host key prompt is hanging the batch process - then
130 the right way to fix it is to add the correct host key to the
131 Registry in advance. That way, you retain the \e{important} feature
132 of host key checking: the right key will be accepted and the wrong
133 ones will not. Adding an option to turn host key checking off
134 completely is the wrong solution and we will not do it.
135
136 \S{faq-server}{Question} Will you write an SSH server for the PuTTY
137 suite, to go with the client?
138
139 No. The only reason we might want to would be if we could easily
140 re-use existing code and significantly cut down the effort. We don't
141 believe this is the case; there just isn't enough common ground
142 between an SSH client and server to make it worthwhile.
143
144 If someone else wants to use bits of PuTTY in the process of writing
145 a Windows SSH server, they'd be perfectly welcome to of course, but
146 I really can't see it being a lot less effort for us to do that than
147 it would be for us to write a server from the ground up. We don't
148 have time, and we don't have motivation. The code is available if
149 anyone else wants to try it.
150
151 \S{faq-pscp-ascii}{Question} Can PSCP or PSFTP transfer files in
152 ASCII mode?
153
154 Unfortunately not. This is a limitation of the file transfer
155 protocols: the SCP and SFTP protocols have no notion of transferring
156 a file in anything other than binary mode.
157
158 SFTP is designed to be extensible, so it's possible that an
159 extension might be proposed at some later date that implements ASCII
160 transfer. But the PuTTY team can't do anything about it until that
161 happens.
162
163 \H{faq-ports} Ports to other operating systems
164
165 The eventual goal is for PuTTY to be a multi-platform program, able
166 to run on at least Windows, MacOS and Unix. Whether this will
167 actually ever happen I have no idea, but it is the plan. A Mac port
168 has been started, but is only half-finished and currently not moving
169 very fast.
170
171 Porting will become easier once PuTTY has a generalised porting
172 layer, drawing a clear line between platform-dependent and
173 platform-independent code. The general intention is for this porting
174 layer to evolve naturally as part of the process of doing the first
175 port. One particularly nasty part of this will be separating the
176 many configuration options into platform-dependent and
177 platform-independent ones; for example, the options controlling when
178 the Windows System menu appears will be pretty much meaningless
179 under X11 or perhaps other windowing systems, whereas Telnet Passive
180 Mode is universal and shouldn't need to be specified once for each
181 platform.
182
183 \S{faq-ports-general}{Question} What ports of PuTTY exist?
184
185 Currently, PuTTY only runs on full Win32 systems. This includes
186 Windows 95, 98, and ME, and it includes Windows NT, Windows 2000 and
187 Windows XP.
188
189 It does \e{not} include Windows CE (see \k{faq-wince}), and it does
190 not quite include the Win32s environment under Windows 3.1 (see
191 \k{faq-win31}).
192
193 We do not have ports for any other systems at the present time. If
194 anyone told you we had a Unix port, or an iPaq port, or any other
195 port of PuTTY, they were mistaken. We don't.
196
197 \S{faq-wince}{Question} Will there be a port to Windows CE?
198
199 Probably not in the particularly near future. Despite sharing large
200 parts of the Windows API, in practice WinCE doesn't appear to be
201 significantly easier to port to than a totally different operating
202 system.
203
204 However, PuTTY on portable devices would clearly be a useful thing,
205 so in the long term I hope there will be a WinCE port.
206
207 \S{faq-win31}{Question} Is there a port to Windows 3.1?
208
209 PuTTY is a 32-bit application from the ground up, so it won't run on
210 Windows 3.1 as a native 16-bit program; and it would be \e{very}
211 hard to port it to do so, because of Windows 3.1's vile memory
212 allocation mechanisms.
213
214 However, it is possible in theory to compile the existing PuTTY
215 source in such a way that it will run under Win32s (an extension to
216 Windows 3.1 to let you run 32-bit programs). In order to do this
217 you'll need the right kind of C compiler - modern versions of Visual
218 C at least have stopped being backwards compatible to Win32s. Also,
219 the last time we tried this it didn't work very well.
220
221 If you're interested in running PuTTY under Windows 3.1, help and
222 testing in this area would be very welcome!
223
224 \S{faq-mac-port}{Question} Will there be a port to the Mac?
225
226 A Mac port was started once and is half-finished, but development
227 has been static for some time and the main PuTTY code has moved on,
228 so it's not clear how quickly development would resume even if
229 developer effort were available.
230
231 \S{faq-unix}{Question} Will there be a port to Unix?
232
233 I hope so, if only so that I can have an \cw{xterm}-like program
234 that supports exactly the same terminal emulation as PuTTY. If and
235 when we do do a Unix port, it will have a local-terminal back end so
236 it can be used like an \cw{xterm}, rather than only being usable as
237 a network utility.
238
239 \S{faq-epoc}{Question} Will there be a port to EPOC?
240
241 I hope so, but given that ports aren't really progressing very fast
242 even on systems the developers \e{do} already know how to program
243 for, it might be a long time before any of us get round to learning
244 a new system and doing the port for that.
245
246 \H{faq-embedding} Embedding PuTTY in other programs
247
248 \S{faq-dll}{Question} Is the SSH or Telnet code available as a DLL?
249
250 No, it isn't. It would take a reasonable amount of rewriting for
251 this to be possible, and since the PuTTY project itself doesn't
252 believe in DLLs (they make installation more error-prone) none of us
253 has taken the time to do it.
254
255 Most of the code cleanup work would be a good thing to happen in
256 general, so if anyone feels like helping, we wouldn't say no.
257
258 \S{faq-vb}{Question} Is the SSH or Telnet code available as a Visual
259 Basic component?
260
261 No, it isn't. None of the PuTTY team uses Visual Basic, and none of
262 us has any particular need to make SSH connections from a Visual
263 Basic application. In addition, all the preliminary work to turn it
264 into a DLL would be necessary first; and furthermore, we don't even
265 know how to write VB components.
266
267 If someone offers to do some of this work for us, we might consider
268 it, but unless that happens I can't see VB integration being
269 anywhere other than the very bottom of our priority list.
270
271 \S{faq-ipc}{Question} How can I use PuTTY to make an SSH connection
272 from within another program?
273
274 Probably your best bet is to use Plink, the command-line connection
275 tool. If you can start Plink as a second Windows process, and
276 arrange for your primary process to be able to send data to the
277 Plink process, and receive data from it, through pipes, then you
278 should be able to make SSH connections from your program.
279
280 This is what CVS for Windows does, for example.
281
282 \H{faq-details} Details of PuTTY's operation
283
284 \S{faq-term}{Question} What terminal type does PuTTY use?
285
286 For most purposes, PuTTY can be considered to be an \cw{xterm}
287 terminal.
288
289 PuTTY also supports some terminal control sequences not supported by
290 the real \cw{xterm}: notably the Linux console sequences that
291 reconfigure the colour palette, and the title bar control sequences
292 used by \cw{DECterm} (which are different from the \cw{xterm} ones;
293 PuTTY supports both).
294
295 By default, PuTTY announces its terminal type to the server as
296 \c{xterm}. If you have a problem with this, you can reconfigure it
297 to say something else; \c{vt220} might help if you have trouble.
298
299 \S{faq-settings}{Question} Where does PuTTY store its data?
300
301 PuTTY stores most of its data (saved sessions, SSH host keys) in the
302 Registry. The precise location is
303
304 \c HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\SimonTatham\PuTTY
305
306 and within that area, saved sessions are stored under \c{Sessions}
307 while host keys are stored under \c{SshHostKeys}.
308
309 PuTTY also requires a random number seed file, to improve the
310 unpredictability of randomly chosen data needed as part of the SSH
311 cryptography. This is stored by default in your Windows home
312 directory (\c{%HOMEDRIVE%\\%HOMEPATH%}), or in the actual Windows
313 directory (such as \c{C:\\WINDOWS}) if the home directory doesn't
314 exist, for example if you're using Win95. If you want to change the
315 location of the random number seed file, you can put your chosen
316 pathname in the Registry, at
317
318 \c HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\SimonTatham\PuTTY\RandSeedFile
319
320 \H{faq-howto} HOWTO questions
321
322 \S{faq-startmax}{Question} How can I make PuTTY start up maximised?
323
324 Create a Windows shortcut to start PuTTY from, and set it as \q{Run
325 Maximized}.
326
327 \S{faq-startsess}{Question} How can I create a Windows shortcut to
328 start a particular saved session directly?
329
330 To run a PuTTY session saved under the name \q{\cw{mysession}},
331 create a Windows shortcut that invokes PuTTY with a command line
332 like
333
334 \c \path\name\to\putty.exe @mysession
335
336 \S{faq-startssh}{Question} How can I start an SSH session straight
337 from the command line?
338
339 Use the command line \c{putty -ssh host.name}. Alternatively, create
340 a saved session that specifies the SSH protocol, and start the saved
341 session as shown in \k{faq-startsess}.
342
343 \S{faq-cutpaste}{Question} How do I copy and paste between PuTTY and
344 other Windows applications?
345
346 Copy and paste works similarly to the X Window System. You use the
347 left mouse button to select text in the PuTTY window. The act of
348 selection \e{automatically} copies the text to the clipboard: there
349 is no need to press Ctrl-Ins or Ctrl-C or anything else. In fact,
350 pressing Ctrl-C will send a Ctrl-C character to the other end of
351 your connection (just like it does the rest of the time), which may
352 have unpleasant effects. The \e{only} thing you need to do, to copy
353 text to the clipboard, is to select it.
354
355 To paste the clipboard contents into a PuTTY window, by default you
356 click the right mouse button. If you have a three-button mouse and
357 are used to X applications, you can configure pasting to be done by
358 the middle button instead, but this is not the default because most
359 Windows users don't have a middle button at all.
360
361 You can also paste by pressing Shift-Ins.
362
363 \S{faq-tunnels}{Question} How do I use X forwarding and port
364 forwarding? I can't find the Tunnels panel.
365
366 This is a new feature in version 0.52. You should upgrade.
367
368 \S{faq-options}{Question} How do I use all PuTTY's features (public
369 keys, port forwarding, SSH v2, etc.) in PSCP, PSFTP and Plink?
370
371 The command-line tools are currently rather short of command line
372 options to enable this sort of thing. However, you can use most of
373 PuTTY's features if you create a PuTTY saved session, and then use
374 the name of the saved session on the command line in place of a
375 hostname. This works for PSCP, PSFTP and Plink (but don't expect
376 port forwarding in the file transfer applications!).
377
378 \S{faq-pscp}{Question} How do I use PSCP.EXE? When I double-click it
379 gives me a command prompt window which then closes instantly.
380
381 PSCP is a command-line application, not a GUI application. If you
382 run it without arguments, it will simply print a help message and
383 terminate.
384
385 To use PSCP properly, run it from a Command Prompt window. See
386 \k{pscp} in the documentation for more details.
387
388 \S{faq-pscp-spaces}{Question} How do I use PSCP to copy a file whose
389 name has spaces in?
390
391 If PSCP is using the traditional SCP protocol, this is confusing. If
392 you're specifying a file at the local end, you just use one set of
393 quotes as you would normally do:
394
395 \c pscp "local filename with spaces" user@host:
396 \c pscp user@host:myfile "local filename with spaces"
397
398 But if the filename you're specifying is on the \e{remote} side, you
399 have to use backslashes and two sets of quotes:
400
401 \c pscp user@host:"\"remote filename with spaces\"" local_filename
402 \c pscp local_filename user@host:"\"remote filename with spaces\""
403
404 Worse still, in a remote-to-local copy you have to specify the local
405 file name explicitly, otherwise PSCP will complain that they don't
406 match (unless you specified the \c{-unsafe} option). The following
407 command will give an error message:
408
409 \c c:\>pscp user@host:"\"oo er\"" .
410 \c warning: remote host tried to write to a file called 'oo er'
411 \c when we requested a file called '"oo er"'.
412
413 Instead, you need to specify the local file name in full:
414
415 \c c:\>pscp user@host:"\"oo er\"" "oo er"
416
417 If PSCP is using the newer SFTP protocol, none of this is a problem,
418 and all filenames with spaces in are specified using a single pair
419 of quotes in the obvious way:
420
421 \c pscp "local file" user@host:
422 \c pscp user@host:"remote file" .
423
424 \H{faq-trouble} Troubleshooting
425
426 \S{faq-incorrect-mac}{Question} Why do I see \q{Incorrect MAC
427 received on packet}?
428
429 This is due to a bug in old SSH 2 servers distributed by
430 \cw{ssh.com}. Version 2.3.0 and below of their SSH 2 server
431 constructs Message Authentication Codes in the wrong way, and
432 expects the client to construct them in the same wrong way. PuTTY
433 constructs the MACs correctly by default, and hence these old
434 servers will fail to work with it.
435
436 If you are using PuTTY version 0.52 or better, this should work
437 automatically: PuTTY should detect the buggy servers from their
438 version number announcement, and automatically start to construct
439 its MACs in the same incorrect manner as they do, so it will be able
440 to work with them.
441
442 If you are using PuTTY version 0.51 or below, you can enable the
443 workaround by going to the SSH panel and ticking the box labelled
444 \q{Imitate SSH 2 MAC bug}. It's possible that you might have to do
445 this with 0.52 as well, if a buggy server exists that PuTTY doesn't
446 know about.
447
448 In this context MAC stands for Message Authentication Code. It's a
449 cryptographic term, and it has nothing at all to do with Ethernet
450 MAC (Media Access Control) addresses.
451
452 \S{faq-pscp-protocol}{Question} Why do I see \q{Fatal: Protocol
453 error: Expected control record} in PSCP?
454
455 This happens because PSCP was expecting to see data from the server
456 that was part of the PSCP protocol exchange, and instead it saw data
457 that it couldn't make any sense of at all.
458
459 This almost always happens because the startup scripts in your
460 account on the server machine are generating output. This is
461 impossible for PSCP, or any other SCP client, to work around. You
462 should never use startup files (\c{.bashrc}, \c{.cshrc} and so on)
463 which generate output in non-interactive sessions.
464
465 This is not actually a PuTTY problem. If PSCP fails in this way,
466 then all other SCP clients are likely to fail in exactly the same
467 way. The problem is at the server end.
468
469 \S{faq-colours}{Question} I clicked on a colour in the Colours
470 panel, and the colour didn't change in my terminal.
471
472 That isn't how you're supposed to use the Colours panel.
473
474 During the course of a session, PuTTY potentially uses \e{all} the
475 colours listed in the Colours panel. It's not a question of using
476 only one of them and you choosing which one; PuTTY will use them
477 \e{all}. The purpose of the Colours panel is to let you adjust the
478 appearance of all the colours. So to change the colour of the
479 cursor, for example, you would select \q{Cursor Colour}, press the
480 \q{Modify} button, and select a new colour from the dialog box that
481 appeared. Similarly, if you want your session to appear in green,
482 you should select \q{Default Foreground} and press \q{Modify}.
483 Clicking on \q{ANSI Green} won't turn your session green; it will
484 only allow you to adjust the \e{shade} of green used when PuTTY is
485 instructed by the server to display green text.
486
487 \S{faq-winsock2}{Question} Plink on Windows 95 says it can't find
488 \cw{WS2_32.DLL}.
489
490 Plink requires the extended Windows network library, WinSock version
491 2. This is installed as standard on Windows 98 and above, and on
492 Windows NT, and even on later versions of Windows 95; but early
493 Win95 installations don't have it.
494
495 In order to use Plink on these systems, you will need to download
496 the
497 \W{http://www.microsoft.com/windows95/downloads/contents/wuadmintools/s_wunetworkingtools/w95sockets2/}{WinSock 2 upgrade}:
498
499 \c http://www.microsoft.com/windows95/downloads/contents/wuadmintools/
500 \c s_wunetworkingtools/w95sockets2/
501
502 \S{faq-rekey}{Question} My PuTTY sessions close after an hour and
503 tell me \q{Server failed host key check}.
504
505 This is a bug in all versions of PuTTY up to and including 0.51. SSH
506 v2 servers from \cw{ssh.com} will require the key exchange to be
507 repeated one hour after the start of the connection, and PuTTY will
508 get this wrong.
509
510 Upgrade to version 0.52 and the problem should go away.
511
512 \S{faq-outofmem}{Question} After trying to establish an SSH 2
513 connection, PuTTY says \q{Out of memory} and dies.
514
515 If this happens just while the connection is starting up, this often
516 indicates that for some reason the client and server have failed to
517 establish a session encryption key. Somehow, they have performed
518 calculations that should have given each of them the same key, but
519 have ended up with different keys; so data encrypted by one and
520 decrypted by the other looks like random garbage.
521
522 This causes an \q{out of memory} error because the first encrypted
523 data PuTTY expects to see is the length of an SSH message. Normally
524 this will be something well under 100 bytes. If the decryption has
525 failed, PuTTY will see a completely random length in the region of
526 two \e{gigabytes}, and will try to allocate enough memory to store
527 this non-existent message. This will immediately lead to it thinking
528 it doesn't have enough memory, and panicking.
529
530 If this happens to you, it is quite likely to still be a PuTTY bug
531 and you should report it (although it might be a bug in your SSH
532 server instead); but it doesn't necessarily mean you've actually run
533 out of memory.
534
535 \S{faq-outofmem2}{Question} When attempting a file transfer, either
536 PSCP or PSFTP says \q{Out of memory} and dies.
537
538 This is almost always caused by your login scripts on the server
539 generating output. PSCP or PSFTP will receive that output when they
540 were expecting to see the start of a file transfer protocol, and
541 they will attempt to interpret the output as file-transfer protocol.
542 This will usually lead to an \q{out of memory} error for much the
543 same reasons as given in \k{faq-outofmem}.
544
545 This is a setup problem in your account on your server, \e{not} a
546 PSCP/PSFTP bug. Your login scripts should \e{never} generate output
547 during non-interactive sessions; secure file transfer is not the
548 only form of remote access that will break if they do.
549
550 On Unix, a simple fix is to ensure that all the parts of your login
551 script that might generate output are in \c{.profile} (if you use a
552 Bourne shell derivative) or \c{.login} (if you use a C shell).
553 Putting them in more general files such as \c{.bashrc} or \c{.cshrc}
554 is liable to lead to problems.
555
556 \S{faq-psftp-slow} PSFTP transfers files much slower than PSCP.
557
558 We believe this is because the SFTP and SSH2 protocols are less
559 efficient at bulk data transfer than SCP and SSH1, because every
560 block of data transferred requires an acknowledgment from the far
561 end. It would in theory be possible to queue several blocks of data
562 to get round this speed problem, but as yet we haven't done the
563 coding. If you really want this fixed, feel free to offer to help.
564
565 \S{faq-bce}{Question} When I run full-colour applications, I see
566 areas of black space where colour ought to be.
567
568 You almost certainly need to enable the \q{Use background colour to
569 erase screen} setting in the Terminal panel. Note that if you do
570 this in mid-session, it won't take effect until you reset the
571 terminal (see \k{faq-resetterm}).
572
573 \S{faq-resetterm}{Question} When I change some terminal settings,
574 nothing happens.
575
576 Some of the terminal options (notably Auto Wrap and
577 background-colour screen erase) actually represent the \e{default}
578 setting, rather than the currently active setting. The server can
579 send sequences that modify these options in mid-session, but when
580 the terminal is reset (by server action, or by you choosing \q{Reset
581 Terminal} from the System menu) the defaults are restored.
582
583 If you want to change one of these options in the middle of a
584 session, you will find that the change does not immediately take
585 effect. It will only take effect once you reset the terminal.
586
587 \S{faq-altgr}{Question} I can't type characters that require the
588 AltGr key.
589
590 In PuTTY version 0.51, the AltGr key was broken. Upgrade to version
591 0.52.
592
593 \S{faq-idleout}{Question} My PuTTY sessions unexpectedly close after
594 they are idle for a while.
595
596 Some types of firewall, and almost any router doing Network Address
597 Translation (NAT, also known as IP masquerading), will forget about
598 a connection through them if the connection does nothing for too
599 long. This will cause the connection to be rudely cut off when
600 contact is resumed.
601
602 You can try to combat this by telling PuTTY to send \e{keepalives}:
603 packets of data which have no effect on the actual session, but
604 which reassure the router or firewall that the network connection is
605 still active and worth remembering about.
606
607 Keepalives don't solve everything, unfortunately; although they
608 cause greater robustness against this sort of router, they can also
609 cause a \e{loss} of robustness against network dropouts. See
610 \k{config-keepalive} in the documentation for more discussion of
611 this.
612
613 \S{faq-timeout}{Question} PuTTY's network connections time out too
614 quickly when network connectivity is temporarily lost.
615
616 This is a Windows problem, not a PuTTY problem. The timeout value
617 can't be set on per application or per session basis. To increase
618 the TCP timeout globally, you need to tinker with the Registry.
619
620 On Windows 95, 98 or ME, the registry key you need to change is
621
622 \c HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\System\CurrentControlSet\Services\VxD\
623 \c MSTCP\MaxDataRetries
624
625 (it must be of type DWORD in Win95, or String in Win98/ME).
626
627 On Windows NT or 2000, the registry key is
628
629 \c HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\Tcpip\
630 \c Parameters\TcpMaxDataRetransmissions
631
632 and it must be of type DWORD.
633
634 Set the key's value to something like 10. This will cause Windows to
635 try harder to keep connections alive instead of abandoning them.
636
637 \S{faq-puttyputty}{Question} When I \cw{cat} a binary file, I get
638 `PuTTYPuTTYPuTTY' on my command line.
639
640 Don't do that, then.
641
642 This is designed behaviour; when PuTTY receives the character
643 Control-E from the remote server, it interprets it as a request to
644 identify itself, and so it sends back the string \q{\cw{PuTTY}} as
645 if that string had been entered at the keyboard. Control-E should
646 only be sent by programs that are prepared to deal with the
647 response. Writing a binary file to your terminal is likely to output
648 many Control-E characters, and cause this behaviour. Don't do it.
649 It's a bad plan.
650
651 To mitigate the effects, you could configure the answerback string
652 to be empty (see \k{config-answerback}); but writing binary files to
653 your terminal is likely to cause various other unpleasant behaviour,
654 so this is only a small remedy.
655
656 \S{faq-wintitle}{Question} When I \cw{cat} a binary file, my window
657 title changes to a nonsense string.
658
659 Don't do that, then.
660
661 It is designed behaviour that PuTTY should have the ability to
662 adjust the window title on instructions from the server. Normally
663 the control sequence that does this should only be sent
664 deliberately, by programs that know what they are doing and intend
665 to put meaningful text in the window title. Writing a binary file to
666 your terminal runs the risk of sending the same control sequence by
667 accident, and cause unexpected changes in the window title. Don't do
668 it.
669
670 \S{faq-password-fails}{Question} My keyboard stops working once
671 PuTTY displays the password prompt.
672
673 No, it doesn't. PuTTY just doesn't display the password you type, so
674 that someone looking at your screen can't see what it is.
675
676 Unlike the Windows login prompts, PuTTY doesn't display the password
677 as a row of asterisks either. This is so that someone looking at
678 your screen can't even tell how \e{long} your password is, which
679 might be valuable information.
680
681 \S{faq-keyboard}{Question} One or more function keys don't do what I
682 expected in a server-side application.
683
684 If you've already tried all the relevant options in the PuTTY
685 Keyboard panel, you may need to mail the PuTTY maintainers and ask.
686
687 It is \e{not} usually helpful just to tell us which application,
688 which server operating system, and which key isn't working; in order
689 to replicate the problem we would need to have a copy of every
690 operating system, and every application, that anyone has ever
691 complained about.
692
693 PuTTY responds to function key presses by sending a sequence of
694 control characters to the server. If a function key isn't doing what
695 you expect, it's likely that the character sequence your application
696 is expecting to receive is not the same as the one PuTTY is sending.
697 Therefore what we really need to know is \e{what} sequence the
698 application is expecting.
699
700 The simplest way to investigate this is to find some other terminal
701 environment, in which that function key \e{does} work; and then
702 investigate what sequence the function key is sending in that
703 situation. One reasonably easy way to do this on a Unix system is to
704 type the command \c{cat}, and then press the function key. This is
705 likely to produce output of the form \c{^[[11~}. You can also do
706 this in PuTTY, to find out what sequence the function key is
707 producing in that. Then you can mail the PuTTY maintainers and tell
708 us \q{I wanted the F1 key to send \c{^[[11~}, but instead it's
709 sending \c{^[OP}, can this be done?}, or something similar.
710
711 You should still read the
712 \W{http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/feedback.html}{Feedback
713 page} on the PuTTY website (also provided as \k{feedback} in the
714 manual), and follow the guidelines contained in that.
715
716 \S{faq-broken-openssh31}{Question} Since my SSH server was upgraded to
717 OpenSSH 3.1p1, I can no longer connect with PuTTY.
718
719 There is a known problem when OpenSSH has been built against an
720 incorrect version of OpenSSL; the quick workaround is to configure
721 PuTTY to use SSH protocol 2 and the Blowfish cipher.
722
723 This is not a PuTTY-specific problem; if you try to connect with
724 another client you'll likely have similar problems.
725
726 Configurations known to be broken (and symptoms):
727
728 \b SSH 2 with AES cipher (PuTTY says "Assertion failed! Expression:
729 (len & 15) == 0" in sshaes.c, or "Out of memory", or crashes)
730
731 \b SSH 2 with 3DES (PuTTY says "Incorrect MAC received on packet")
732
733 \b SSH 1 with Blowfish (PuTTY says "Incorrect CRC received on
734 packet")
735
736 \b SSH 1 with 3DES
737
738 For more details and OpenSSH patches, see
739 \W{http://bugzilla.mindrot.org/show_bug.cgi?id=138}{bug 138} in the
740 OpenSSH BTS.
741
742 \H{faq-secure} Security questions
743
744 \S{faq-publicpc}{Question} Is it safe for me to download PuTTY and
745 use it on a public PC?
746
747 It depends on whether you trust that PC. If you don't trust the
748 public PC, don't use PuTTY on it, and don't use any other software
749 you plan to type passwords into either. It might be watching your
750 keystrokes, or it might tamper with the PuTTY binary you download.
751 There is \e{no} program safe enough that you can run it on an
752 actively malicious PC and get away with typing passwords into it.
753
754 If you do trust the PC, then it's probably OK to use PuTTY on it
755 (but if you don't trust the network, then the PuTTY download might
756 be tampered with, so it would be better to carry PuTTY with you on a
757 floppy).
758
759 \S{faq-cleanup}{Question} What does PuTTY leave on a system? How can
760 I clean up after it?
761
762 PuTTY will leave some Registry entries, and a random seed file, on
763 the PC (see \k{faq-settings}). If you are using PuTTY on a public
764 PC, or somebody else's PC, you might want to clean these up when you
765 leave. You can do that automatically, by running the command
766 \c{putty -cleanup}.
767
768 \S{faq-dsa}{Question} How come PuTTY now supports DSA, when the
769 website used to say how insecure it was?
770
771 DSA has a major weakness \e{if badly implemented}: it relies on a
772 random number generator to far too great an extent. If the random
773 number generator produces a number an attacker can predict, the DSA
774 private key is exposed - meaning that the attacker can log in as you
775 on all systems that accept that key.
776
777 The PuTTY policy changed because the developers were informed of
778 ways to implement DSA which do not suffer nearly as badly from this
779 weakness, and indeed which don't need to rely on random numbers at
780 all. For this reason we now believe PuTTY's DSA implementation is
781 probably OK. However, if you have the choice, we still recommend you
782 use RSA instead.
783
784 \H{faq-admin} Administrative questions
785
786 \S{faq-domain}{Question} Would you like me to register you a nicer
787 domain name?
788
789 No, thank you. Even if you can find one (most of them seem to have
790 been registered already, by people who didn't ask whether we
791 actually wanted it before they applied), we're happy with the PuTTY
792 web site being exactly where it is. It's not hard to find (just type
793 \q{putty} into \W{http://www.google.com/}{google.com} and we're the
794 first link returned), and we don't believe the administrative hassle
795 of moving the site would be worth the benefit.
796
797 In addition, if we \e{did} want a custom domain name, we would want
798 to run it ourselves, so we knew for certain that it would continue
799 to point where we wanted it, and wouldn't suddenly change or do
800 strange things. Having it registered for us by a third party who we
801 don't even know is not the best way to achieve this.
802
803 \S{faq-webhosting}{Question} Would you like free web hosting for the
804 PuTTY web site?
805
806 We already have some, thanks.
807
808 \S{faq-sourceforge}{Question} Why don't you move PuTTY to
809 SourceForge?
810
811 Partly, because we don't want to move the web site location (see
812 \k{faq-domain}).
813
814 Also, security reasons. PuTTY is a security product, and as such it
815 is particularly important to guard the code and the web site against
816 unauthorised modifications which might introduce subtle security
817 flaws. Therefore, we prefer that the CVS repository, web site and
818 FTP site remain where they are, under the direct control of system
819 administrators we know and trust personally, rather than being run
820 by a large organisation full of people we've never met and which is
821 known to have had breakins in the past.
822
823 No offence to SourceForge; I think they do a wonderful job. But
824 they're not ideal for everyone, and in particular they're not ideal
825 for us.
826
827 \S{faq-mailinglist1}{Question} Why can't I subscribe to the
828 putty-bugs mailing list?
829
830 Because you're not a member of the PuTTY core development team. The
831 putty-bugs mailing list is not a general newsgroup-like discussion
832 forum; it's a contact address for the core developers, and an
833 \e{internal} mailing list for us to discuss things among ourselves.
834 If we opened it up for everybody to subscribe to, it would turn into
835 something more like a newsgroup and we would be completely
836 overwhelmed by the volume of traffic. It's hard enough to keep up
837 with the list as it is.
838
839 \S{faq-mailinglist2}{Question} If putty-bugs isn't a
840 general-subscription mailing list, what is?
841
842 There isn't one, that we know of.
843
844 If someone else wants to set up a mailing list for PuTTY users to
845 help each other with common problems, that would be fine with us;
846 but the PuTTY team would almost certainly not have the time to read
847 it, so any questions the list couldn't answer would have to be
848 forwarded on to us by the questioner. In any case, it's probably
849 better to use the established newsgroup \cw{comp.security.ssh} for
850 this purpose.
851
852 \S{faq-donations}{Question} How can I donate to PuTTY development?
853
854 Please, \e{please} don't feel you have to. PuTTY is completely free
855 software, and not shareware. We think it's very important that
856 \e{everybody} who wants to use PuTTY should be able to, whether they
857 have any money or not; so the last thing we would want is for a
858 PuTTY user to feel guilty because they haven't paid us any money. If
859 you want to keep your money, please do keep it. We wouldn't dream of
860 asking for any.
861
862 Having said all that, if you still really \e{want} to give us money,
863 we won't argue :-) The easiest way for us to accept donations is if
864 you go to \W{http://www.e-gold.com}\cw{www.e-gold.com}, and deposit
865 your donation in account number 174769. Then send us e-mail to let
866 us know you've done so (otherwise we might not notice for months!).
867 Alternatively, if e-gold isn't convenient for you, you can donate to
868 \cw{<anakin@pobox.com>} using PayPal
869 (\W{http://www.paypal.com/}\cw{www.paypal.com}).
870
871 Small donations (tens of dollars or tens of euros) will probably be
872 spent on beer or curry, which helps motivate our volunteer team to
873 continue doing this for the world. Larger donations will be spent on
874 something that actually helps development, if we can find anything
875 (perhaps new hardware, or a copy of Windows XP), but if we can't
876 find anything then we'll just distribute the money among the
877 developers. If you want to be sure your donation is going towards
878 something worthwhile, ask us first. If you don't like these terms,
879 feel perfectly free not to donate. We don't mind.
880
881 \S{faq-sillyputty}{Question} Where can I buy silly putty?
882
883 You're looking at the wrong web site; the only PuTTY we know about
884 here is the name of a computer program.
885
886 If you want the kind of putty you can buy as an executive toy, the
887 PuTTY team can personally recommend Thinking Putty, which you can
888 buy from Crazy Aaron's Putty World, at
889 \W{http://www.puttyworld.com}\cw{www.puttyworld.com}.
890
891 \S{faq-pronounce}{Question} How do I pronounce PuTTY?
892
893 Exactly like the normal word \q{putty}. Just like the stuff you put
894 on window frames. (One of the reasons it's called PuTTY is because
895 it makes Windows usable. :-)