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1 \define{versionidfeedback} \versionid $Id$
2
3 \A{feedback} \ii{Feedback} and \i{bug reporting}
4
5 This is a guide to providing feedback to the PuTTY development team.
6 It is provided as both a web page on the PuTTY site, and an appendix
7 in the PuTTY manual.
8
9 \K{feedback-general} gives some general guidelines for sending any
10 kind of e-mail to the development team. Following sections give more
11 specific guidelines for particular types of e-mail, such as bug
12 reports and feature requests.
13
14 \H{feedback-general} General guidelines
15
16 The PuTTY development team gets a \e{lot} of mail. If you can
17 possibly solve your own problem by reading the manual, reading the
18 FAQ, reading the web site, asking a fellow user, perhaps posting to a
19 newsgroup (see \k{feedback-other-fora}), or some other means, then it
20 would make our lives much easier.
21
22 We get so much e-mail that we literally do not have time to answer
23 it all. We regret this, but there's nothing we can do about it. So
24 if you can \e{possibly} avoid sending mail to the PuTTY team, we
25 recommend you do so. In particular, support requests
26 (\k{feedback-support}) are probably better sent to newsgroups, or
27 passed to a local expert if possible.
28
29 The PuTTY contact email address is a private \i{mailing list} containing
30 four or five core developers. Don't be put off by it being a mailing
31 list: if you need to send confidential data as part of a bug report,
32 you can trust the people on the list to respect that confidence.
33 Also, the archives aren't publicly available, so you shouldn't be
34 letting yourself in for any spam by sending us mail.
35
36 Please use a meaningful subject line on your message. We get a lot of
37 mail, and it's hard to find the message we're looking for if they all
38 have subject lines like \q{PuTTY bug}.
39
40 \S{feedback-largefiles} Sending large attachments
41
42 Since the PuTTY contact address is a mailing list, e-mails larger
43 than 40Kb will be held for inspection by the list administrator, and
44 will not be allowed through unless they really appear to be worth
45 their large size.
46
47 If you are considering sending any kind of large data file to the
48 PuTTY team, it's almost always a bad idea, or at the very least it
49 would be better to ask us first whether we actually need the file.
50 Alternatively, you could put the file on a web site and just send us
51 the URL; that way, we don't have to download it unless we decide we
52 actually need it, and only one of us needs to download it instead of
53 it being automatically copied to all the developers.
54
55 Some people like to send mail in MS Word format. Please \e{don't}
56 send us bug reports, or any other mail, as a Word document. Word
57 documents are roughly fifty times larger than writing the same
58 report in plain text. In addition, most of the PuTTY team read their
59 e-mail on Unix machines, so copying the file to a Windows box to run
60 Word is very inconvenient. Not only that, but several of us don't
61 even \e{have} a copy of Word!
62
63 Some people like to send us screen shots when demonstrating a
64 problem. Please don't do this without checking with us first - we
65 almost never actually need the information in the screen shot.
66 Sending a screen shot of an error box is almost certainly
67 unnecessary when you could just tell us in plain text what the error
68 was. (On some versions of Windows, pressing Ctrl-C when the error
69 box is displayed will copy the text of the message to the clipboard.)
70 Sending a full-screen shot is \e{occasionally} useful, but it's
71 probably still wise to check whether we need it before sending it.
72
73 If you \e{must} mail a screen shot, don't send it as a \cw{.BMP}
74 file. \cw{BMP}s have no compression and they are \e{much} larger
75 than other image formats such as PNG, TIFF and GIF. Convert the file
76 to a properly compressed image format before sending it.
77
78 Please don't mail us executables, at all. Our mail server blocks all
79 incoming e-mail containing executables, as a defence against the
80 vast numbers of e-mail viruses we receive every day. If you mail us
81 an executable, it will just bounce.
82
83 If you have made a tiny modification to the PuTTY code, please send
84 us a \e{patch} to the source code if possible, rather than sending
85 us a huge \cw{.ZIP} file containing the complete sources plus your
86 modification. If you've only changed 10 lines, we'd prefer to
87 receive a mail that's 30 lines long than one containing multiple
88 megabytes of data we already have.
89
90 \S{feedback-other-fora} Other places to ask for help
91
92 There are two Usenet newsgroups that are particularly relevant to the
93 PuTTY tools:
94
95 \b \W{news:comp.security.ssh}\c{comp.security.ssh}, for questions
96 specific to using the SSH protocol;
97
98 \b \W{news:comp.terminals}\c{comp.terminals}, for issues relating to
99 terminal emulation (for instance, keyboard problems).
100
101 Please use the newsgroup most appropriate to your query, and remember
102 that these are general newsgroups, not specifically about PuTTY.
103
104 If you don't have direct access to Usenet, you can access these
105 newsgroups through Google Groups
106 (\W{http://groups.google.com/}\cw{groups.google.com}).
107
108 \H{feedback-bugs} Reporting bugs
109
110 If you think you have found a bug in PuTTY, your first steps should
111 be:
112
113 \b Check the
114 \W{http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/wishlist/}{Wishlist
115 page} on the PuTTY website, and see if we already know about the
116 problem. If we do, it is almost certainly not necessary to mail us
117 about it, unless you think you have extra information that might be
118 helpful to us in fixing it. (Of course, if we actually \e{need}
119 specific extra information about a particular bug, the Wishlist page
120 will say so.)
121
122 \b Check the
123 \W{http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/changes.html}{Change
124 Log} on the PuTTY website, and see if we have already fixed the bug
125 in the \i{development snapshots}.
126
127 \b Check the
128 \W{http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/faq.html}{FAQ}
129 on the PuTTY website (also provided as \k{faq} in the manual), and
130 see if it answers your question. The FAQ lists the most common
131 things which people think are bugs, but which aren't bugs.
132
133 \b Download the latest development snapshot and see if the problem
134 still happens with that. This really is worth doing. As a general
135 rule we aren't very interested in bugs that appear in the release
136 version but not in the development version, because that usually
137 means they are bugs we have \e{already fixed}. On the other hand, if
138 you can find a bug in the development version that doesn't appear in
139 the release, that's likely to be a new bug we've introduced since
140 the release and we're definitely interested in it.
141
142 If none of those options solved your problem, and you still need to
143 report a bug to us, it is useful if you include some general
144 information:
145
146 \b Tell us what \i{version of PuTTY} you are running. To find this out,
147 use the \q{About PuTTY} option from the System menu. Please \e{do
148 not} just tell us \q{I'm running the latest version}; e-mail can be
149 delayed and it may not be obvious which version was the latest at
150 the time you sent the message.
151
152 \b PuTTY is a multi-platform application; tell us what version of what
153 OS you are running PuTTY on. (If you're running on Unix, or Windows
154 for Alpha, tell us, or we'll assume you're running on Windows for
155 Intel as this is overwhelmingly the case.)
156
157 \b Tell us what protocol you are connecting with: SSH, Telnet,
158 Rlogin or Raw mode.
159
160 \b Tell us what kind of server you are connecting to; what OS, and
161 if possible what SSH server (if you're using SSH). You can get some
162 of this information from the PuTTY Event Log (see \k{using-eventlog}
163 in the manual).
164
165 \b Send us the contents of the PuTTY Event Log, unless you
166 have a specific reason not to (for example, if it contains
167 confidential information that you think we should be able to solve
168 your problem without needing to know).
169
170 \b Try to give us as much information as you can to help us
171 see the problem for ourselves. If possible, give us a step-by-step
172 sequence of \e{precise} instructions for reproducing the fault.
173
174 \b Don't just tell us that PuTTY \q{does the wrong thing}; tell us
175 exactly and precisely what it did, and also tell us exactly and
176 precisely what you think it should have done instead. Some people
177 tell us PuTTY does the wrong thing, and it turns out that it was
178 doing the right thing and their expectations were wrong. Help to
179 avoid this problem by telling us exactly what you think it should
180 have done, and exactly what it did do.
181
182 \b If you think you can, you're welcome to try to fix the problem
183 yourself. A \i{patch} to the code which fixes a bug is an excellent
184 addition to a bug report. However, a patch is never a \e{substitute}
185 for a good bug report; if your patch is wrong or inappropriate, and
186 you haven't supplied us with full information about the actual bug,
187 then we won't be able to find a better solution.
188
189 \b
190 \W{http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/bugs.html}\cw{http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/bugs.html}
191 is an article on how to report bugs effectively in general. If your
192 bug report is \e{particularly} unclear, we may ask you to go away,
193 read this article, and then report the bug again.
194
195 It is reasonable to report bugs in PuTTY's documentation, if you
196 think the documentation is unclear or unhelpful. But we do need to
197 be given exact details of \e{what} you think the documentation has
198 failed to tell you, or \e{how} you think it could be made clearer.
199 If your problem is simply that you don't \e{understand} the
200 documentation, we suggest posting to a newsgroup (see
201 \k{feedback-other-fora}) and seeing if someone
202 will explain what you need to know. \e{Then}, if you think the
203 documentation could usefully have told you that, send us a bug
204 report and explain how you think we should change it.
205
206 \H{feedback-features} Requesting extra features
207
208 If you want to request a new feature in PuTTY, the very first things
209 you should do are:
210
211 \b Check the
212 \W{http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/wishlist/}{Wishlist
213 page} on the PuTTY website, and see if your feature is already on
214 the list. If it is, it probably won't achieve very much to repeat
215 the request. (But see \k{feedback-feature-priority} if you want to
216 persuade us to give your particular feature higher priority.)
217
218 \b Check the Wishlist and
219 \W{http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/changes.html}{Change
220 Log} on the PuTTY website, and see if we have already added your
221 feature in the development snapshots. If it isn't clear, download
222 the latest development snapshot and see if the feature is present.
223 If it is, then it will also be in the next release and there is no
224 need to mail us at all.
225
226 If you can't find your feature in either the development snapshots
227 \e{or} the Wishlist, then you probably do need to submit a feature
228 request. Since the PuTTY authors are very busy, it helps if you try
229 to do some of the work for us:
230
231 \b Do as much of the design as you can. Think about \q{corner
232 cases}; think about how your feature interacts with other existing
233 features. Think about the user interface; if you can't come up with
234 a simple and intuitive interface to your feature, you shouldn't be
235 surprised if we can't either. Always imagine whether it's possible
236 for there to be more than one, or less than one, of something you'd
237 assumed there would be one of. (For example, if you were to want
238 PuTTY to put an icon in the System tray rather than the Taskbar, you
239 should think about what happens if there's more than one PuTTY
240 active; how would the user tell which was which?)
241
242 \b If you can program, it may be worth offering to write the feature
243 yourself and send us a patch. However, it is likely to be helpful
244 if you confer with us first; there may be design issues you haven't
245 thought of, or we may be about to make big changes to the code which
246 your patch would clash with, or something. If you check with the
247 maintainers first, there is a better chance of your code actually
248 being usable. Also, read the design principles listed in \k{udp}: if
249 you do not conform to them, we will probably not be able to accept
250 your patch.
251
252 \H{feedback-feature-priority} Requesting features that have already
253 been requested
254
255 If a feature is already listed on the Wishlist, then it usually
256 means we would like to add it to PuTTY at some point. However, this
257 may not be in the near future. If there's a feature on the Wishlist
258 which you would like to see in the \e{near} future, there are
259 several things you can do to try to increase its priority level:
260
261 \b Mail us and vote for it. (Be sure to mention that you've seen it
262 on the Wishlist, or we might think you haven't even \e{read} the
263 Wishlist). This probably won't have very \e{much} effect; if a huge
264 number of people vote for something then it may make a difference,
265 but one or two extra votes for a particular feature are unlikely to
266 change our priority list immediately. Offering a new and compelling
267 justification might help. Also, don't expect a reply.
268
269 \b Offer us money if we do the work sooner rather than later. This
270 sometimes works, but not always. The PuTTY team all have full-time
271 jobs and we're doing all of this work in our free time; we may
272 sometimes be willing to give up some more of our free time in
273 exchange for some money, but if you try to bribe us for a \e{big}
274 feature it's entirely possible that we simply won't have the time to
275 spare - whether you pay us or not. (Also, we don't accept bribes to
276 add \e{bad} features to the Wishlist, because our desire to provide
277 high-quality software to the users comes first.)
278
279 \b Offer to help us write the code. This is probably the \e{only}
280 way to get a feature implemented quickly, if it's a big one that we
281 don't have time to do ourselves.
282
283 \H{feedback-support} \ii{Support requests}
284
285 If you're trying to make PuTTY do something for you and it isn't
286 working, but you're not sure whether it's a bug or not, then
287 \e{please} consider looking for help somewhere else. This is one of
288 the most common types of mail the PuTTY team receives, and we simply
289 don't have time to answer all the questions. Questions of this type
290 include:
291
292 \b If you want to do something with PuTTY but have no idea where to
293 start, and reading the manual hasn't helped, try posting to a
294 newsgroup (see \k{feedback-other-fora}) and see if someone can explain
295 it to you.
296
297 \b If you have tried to do something with PuTTY but it hasn't
298 worked, and you aren't sure whether it's a bug in PuTTY or a bug in
299 your SSH server or simply that you're not doing it right, then try
300 posting to a newsgroup (see \k{feedback-other-fora}) and see
301 if someone can solve your problem. Or try doing the same thing with
302 a different SSH client and see if it works with that. Please do not
303 report it as a PuTTY bug unless you are really sure it \e{is} a bug
304 in PuTTY.
305
306 \b If someone else installed PuTTY for you, or you're using PuTTY on
307 someone else's computer, try asking them for help first. They're more
308 likely to understand how they installed it and what they expected you
309 to use it for than we are.
310
311 \b If you have successfully made a connection to your server and now
312 need to know what to type at the server's command prompt, or other
313 details of how to use the server-end software, talk to your server's
314 system administrator. This is not the PuTTY team's problem. PuTTY is
315 only a communications tool, like a telephone; if you can't speak the
316 same language as the person at the other end of the phone, it isn't
317 the telephone company's job to teach it to you.
318
319 If you absolutely cannot get a support question answered any other
320 way, you can try mailing it to us, but we can't guarantee to have
321 time to answer it.
322
323 \H{feedback-webadmin} Web server administration
324
325 If the PuTTY \i{web site} is down (Connection Timed Out), please don't
326 bother mailing us to tell us about it. Most of us read our e-mail on
327 the same machines that host the web site, so if those machines are
328 down then we will notice \e{before} we read our e-mail. So there's
329 no point telling us our servers are down.
330
331 Of course, if the web site has some other error (Connection Refused,
332 404 Not Found, 403 Forbidden, or something else) then we might
333 \e{not} have noticed and it might still be worth telling us about it.
334
335 If you want to report a problem with our web site, check that you're
336 looking at our \e{real} web site and not a mirror. The real web site
337 is at
338 \W{http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/}\c{http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/};
339 if that's not where you're reading this, then don't report the
340 problem to us until you've checked that it's really a problem with
341 the main site. If it's only a problem with the mirror, you should
342 try to contact the administrator of that mirror site first, and only
343 contact us if that doesn't solve the problem (in case we need to
344 remove the mirror from our list).
345
346 \H{feedback-permission} Asking permission for things
347
348 PuTTY is distributed under the MIT Licence (see \k{licence} for
349 details). This means you can do almost \e{anything} you like with
350 our software, our source code, and our documentation. The only
351 things you aren't allowed to do are to remove our copyright notices
352 or the licence text itself, or to hold us legally responsible if
353 something goes wrong.
354
355 So if you want permission to include PuTTY on a magazine cover disk,
356 or as part of a collection of useful software on a CD or a web site,
357 then \e{permission is already granted}. You don't have to mail us
358 and ask. Just go ahead and do it. We don't mind.
359
360 (If you want to distribute PuTTY alongside your own application for
361 use with that application, or if you want to distribute PuTTY within
362 your own organisation, then we recommend, but do not insist, that
363 you offer your own first-line technical support, to answer questions
364 about the interaction of PuTTY with your environment. If your users
365 mail us directly, we won't be able to tell them anything useful about
366 your specific setup.)
367
368 If you want to use parts of the PuTTY source code in another
369 program, then it might be worth mailing us to talk about technical
370 details, but if all you want is to ask permission then you don't
371 need to bother. You already have permission.
372
373 If you just want to link to our web site, just go ahead. (It's not
374 clear that we \e{could} stop you doing this, even if we wanted to!)
375
376 \H{feedback-mirrors} Mirroring the PuTTY web site
377
378 \# the next two paragraphs also on the Mirrors page itself, with
379 \# minor context changes
380
381 If you want to set up a mirror of the PuTTY website, go ahead and
382 set one up. Please don't bother asking us for permission before
383 setting up a mirror. You already have permission.
384
385 If the mirror is in a country where we don't already have plenty of
386 mirrors, we may be willing to add it to the list on our
387 \W{http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/mirrors.html}{mirrors
388 page}. Read the guidelines on that page, make sure your mirror
389 works, and email us the information listed at the bottom of the
390 page.
391
392 Note that we do not \e{promise} to list your mirror: we get a lot of
393 mirror notifications and yours may not happen to find its way to the
394 top of the list.
395
396 Also note that we link to all our mirror sites using the
397 \c{rel="nofollow"} attribute. Running a PuTTY mirror is not intended
398 to be a cheap way to gain search rankings.
399
400 If you have technical questions about the process of mirroring, then
401 you might want to mail us before setting up the mirror (see also the
402 \W{http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/mirrors.html#guidelines}{guidelines on the Mirrors page});
403 but if you just want to ask for permission, you don't need to. You
404 already have permission.
405
406 \H{feedback-compliments} Praise and compliments
407
408 One of the most rewarding things about maintaining free software is
409 getting e-mails that just say \q{thanks}. We are always happy to
410 receive e-mails of this type.
411
412 Regrettably we don't have time to answer them all in person. If you
413 mail us a compliment and don't receive a reply, \e{please} don't
414 think we've ignored you. We did receive it and we were happy about
415 it; we just didn't have time to tell you so personally.
416
417 To everyone who's ever sent us praise and compliments, in the past
418 and the future: \e{you're welcome}!
419
420 \H{feedback-address} E-mail address
421
422 The actual address to mail is
423 \cw{<\W{mailto:putty@projects.tartarus.org}{putty@projects.tartarus.org}>}.