This is the README for the source archive of PuTTY, a free Win32 Telnet and SSH client. If you want to rebuild PuTTY from source, we provide a variety of Makefiles and equivalents: - Makefile.vc is for command-line builds on MS Visual C++ systems. Type `nmake -f Makefile.vc' to build all the PuTTY binaries. (We've also had one report of success building with the OpenWatcom compiler -- www.openwatcom.org -- using Makefile.vc with `wmake -ms -f makefile.vc' and NO_MULTIMON, although we haven't tried this ourselves.) - Inside the MSVC subdirectory are MS Visual Studio project files for doing GUI-based builds of the various PuTTY utilities. These have been tested on Visual Studio 6. You should be able to build each PuTTY utility by loading the corresponding .dsp file in Visual Studio. For example, MSVC/putty/putty.dsp builds PuTTY itself, MSVC/plink/plink.dsp builds Plink, and so on. - Makefile.bor is for the Borland C compiler. Type `make -f Makefile.bor' to build all the PuTTY binaries. - Makefile.cyg is for Cygwin / mingw32 installations. Type `make -f Makefile.cyg' to build all the PuTTY binaries. Note that by default the Pageant WinNT security features and the multiple monitor support are excluded from the Cygwin build, since at the time of writing this Cygwin doesn't include the necessary headers. - Makefile.lcc is for lcc-win32. Type `make -f Makefile.lcc'. (You will probably need to specify COMPAT=-DNO_MULTIMON.) All of the Makefiles are generated automatically from the file `Recipe' by the Perl script `mkfiles.pl'. Additions and corrections to Recipe and the mkfiles.pl are much more useful than additions and corrections to the alternative Makefiles themselves. The PuTTY home web site is http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/ If you want to send bug reports or feature requests, please read the Feedback section of the web site before doing so. Sending one-line reports saying `it doesn't work' will waste your time as much as ours. See the file LICENCE for the licence conditions.