# winpty [![Build Status](https://tea-ci.org/api/badges/rprichard/winpty/status.svg)](https://tea-ci.org/rprichard/winpty) winpty is a Windows software package providing an interface similar to a Unix pty-master for communicating with Windows console programs. The package consists of a library (libwinpty) and a tool for Cygwin and MSYS for running Windows console programs in a Cygwin/MSYS pty. The software works by starting the `winpty-agent.exe` process with a new, hidden console window, which bridges between the console API and terminal input/output escape codes. It polls the hidden console's screen buffer for changes and generates a corresponding stream of output. The Unix adapter allows running Windows console programs (e.g. CMD, PowerShell, IronPython, etc.) under `mintty` or Cygwin's `sshd` with properly-functioning input (e.g. arrow and function keys) and output (e.g. line buffering). The library could be also useful for writing a non-Cygwin SSH server. ## Supported Windows versions winpty runs on Windows XP through Windows 10, including server versions. It can be compiled into either 32-bit or 64-bit binaries. ## Cygwin/MSYS adapter (`winpty.exe`) ### Prerequisites You need the following to build winpty: * A Cygwin or MSYS installation * GNU make * A MinGW g++ toolchain capable of compiling C++11 code to build `winpty.dll` and `winpty-agent.exe` * A g++ toolchain targeting Cygwin or MSYS to build `winpty.exe` Winpty requires two g++ toolchains as it is split into two parts. The `winpty.dll` and `winpty-agent.exe` binaries interface with the native Windows command prompt window so they are compiled with the native MinGW toolchain. The `winpty.exe` binary interfaces with the MSYS/Cygwin terminal so it is compiled with the MSYS/Cygwin toolchain. MinGW appears to be split into two distributions -- MinGW (creates 32-bit binaries) and MinGW-w64 (creates both 32-bit and 64-bit binaries). Either one is generally acceptable. #### Cygwin packages The default g++ compiler for Cygwin targets Cygwin itself, but Cygwin also packages MinGW-w64 compilers. As of this writing, the necessary packages are: * Either `mingw64-i686-gcc-g++` or `mingw64-x86_64-gcc-g++`. Select the appropriate compiler for your CPU architecture. * `gcc-g++` * `make` As of this writing (2016-01-23), only the MinGW-w64 compiler is acceptable. The MinGW compiler (e.g. from the `mingw-gcc-g++` package) is no longer maintained and is too buggy. #### MSYS packages For the original MSYS, use the `mingw-get` tool (MinGW Installation Manager), and select at least these components: * `mingw-developer-toolkit` * `mingw32-base` * `mingw32-gcc-g++` * `msys-base` * `msys-system-builder` When running `./configure`, make sure that `mingw32-g++` is in your `PATH`. It will be in the `C:\MinGW\bin` directory. #### MSYS2 packages For MSYS2, use `pacman` and install at least these packages: * `msys/gcc` * `mingw32/mingw-w64-i686-gcc` or `mingw64/mingw-w64-x86_64-gcc`. Select the appropriate compiler for your CPU architecture. * `make` MSYS2 provides three start menu shortcuts for starting MSYS2: * MinGW-w64 Win32 Shell * MinGW-w64 Win64 Shell * MSYS2 Shell To build winpty, use the MinGW-w64 {Win32,Win64} shortcut of the architecture matching MSYS2. These shortcuts will put the g++ compiler from the `{mingw32,mingw64}/mingw-w64-{i686,x86_64}-gcc` packages into the `PATH`. Alternatively, instead of installing `mingw32/mingw-w64-i686-gcc` or `mingw64/mingw-w64-x86_64-gcc`, install the `mingw-w64-cross-gcc` and `mingw-w64-cross-crt-git` packages. These packages install cross-compilers into `/opt/bin`, and then any of the three shortcuts will work. ### Building the Unix adapter In the project directory, run `./configure`, then `make`, then `make install`. By default, winpty is installed into `/usr/local`. Pass `PREFIX=` to `make install` to override this default. ### Using the Unix adapter To run a Windows console program in `mintty` or Cygwin `sshd`, prepend `winpty` to the command-line: $ winpty powershell Windows PowerShell Copyright (C) 2009 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. PS C:\rprichard\proj\winpty> 10 + 20 30 PS C:\rprichard\proj\winpty> exit ## Embedding winpty / MSVC compilation See `src/include/winpty.h` for the prototypes of functions exported by `winpty.dll`. Only the `winpty.exe` binary uses Cygwin; all the other binaries work without it and can be compiled with either MinGW or MSVC. To compile using MSVC, download gyp and run `gyp -I configurations.gypi` in the `src` subdirectory. This will generate a `winpty.sln` and associated project files. See the `src/winpty.gyp` and `src/configurations.gypi` files for notes on dealing with MSVC versions and different architectures. Compiling winpty with MSVC currently requires MSVC 2013 or newer. ## Debugging winpty winpty comes with a tool for collecting timestamped debugging output. To use it: 1. Run `winpty-debugserver.exe` on the same computer as winpty. 2. Set the `WINPTY_DEBUG` environment variable to `trace` for the `winpty.exe` process and/or the process using `libwinpty.dll`. winpty also recognizes a `WINPTY_SHOW_CONSOLE` environment variable. Set it to 1 to prevent winpty from hiding the console window. ## Copyright This project is distributed under the MIT license (see the `LICENSE` file in the project root). By submitting a pull request for this project, you agree to license your contribution under the MIT license to this project.