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228 lines
9.1 KiB
Markdown
228 lines
9.1 KiB
Markdown
[![Build
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Status](https://travis-ci.org/GaloisInc/cryptol.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/GaloisInc/cryptol)
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# Cryptol, version 2
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This version of Cryptol is (C) 2013-2017 Galois, Inc., and
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distributed under a standard, three-clause BSD license. Please see
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the file LICENSE, distributed with this software, for specific
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terms and conditions.
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# What is Cryptol?
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The Cryptol specification language was designed by Galois for the
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NSA's Trusted Systems Research Group as a public standard for
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specifying cryptographic algorithms. A Cryptol reference specification
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can serve as the formal documentation for a cryptographic module.
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Unlike current specification mechanisms, Cryptol is fully executable,
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allowing designers to experiment with their programs incrementally as
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their designs evolve.
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This release is an interpreter for version 2 of the Cryptol
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language. The interpreter includes a `:check` command, which tests
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predicates written in Cryptol against randomly-generated test vectors
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(in the style of
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[QuickCheck](http://hackage.haskell.org/package/QuickCheck)). There is
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also a `:prove` command, which calls out to SMT solvers, such as
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Yices, Z3, or CVC4, to prove predicates for all possible inputs.
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# Getting Cryptol Binaries
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Cryptol binaries for Mac OS X, Linux, and Windows are available from
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the GitHub
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[releases page](https://github.com/GaloisInc/cryptol/releases). Mac OS
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X and Linux binaries are distributed as a tarball which you can
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extract to a location of your choice. Windows binaries are distributed
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as an `.msi` installer package which places a shortcut to the Cryptol
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interpreter in the Start menu.
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On Mac OS X, Cryptol is also available via
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[Homebrew](http://brew.sh/). Simply run `brew update && brew install
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cryptol` to get the latest stable version.
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## Getting Z3
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Cryptol currently uses Microsoft Research's [Z3 SMT
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solver](https://github.com/Z3Prover/z3) by default to solve constraints
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during type checking, and as the default solver for the `:sat` and
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`:prove` commands. You can download Z3 binaries for a variety of
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platforms from their [releases page](https://github.com/Z3Prover/z3/releases).
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Cryptol generally requires the most recent version of Z3, which at the
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time of writing this file is 4.5.0. Note that if you install Cryptol
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using Homebrew, the appropriate version of Z3 will be installed
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automatically.
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After installation, make sure that `z3` (or `z3.exe` on Windows)
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is on your PATH.
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### Note for 64-bit Linux Users
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On some 64-bit Linux configurations, 32-bit binaries do not work. This
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can lead to unhelpful error messages like `z3: no such file or
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directory`, even when `z3` is clearly present. To fix this, either
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install 32-bit compatibility packages for your distribution, or
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download the `x64` version of Z3.
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# Building Cryptol From Source
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In addition to the binaries, the Cryptol source is available publicly
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on [GitHub](https://github.com/GaloisInc/cryptol).
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Cryptol builds and runs on various flavors of Linux, Mac OS X, and
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Windows. We regularly build and test it in the following environments:
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- Mac OS X 10.10 64-bit
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- CentOS 6 32/64-bit
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- Windows 7 32-bit
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## Prerequisites
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Cryptol is developed using GHC 7.10.2 and cabal-install 1.22, though
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it is still tested with the previous major version of GHC. The easiest
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way to get the correct versions is to follow the instructions on the
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[haskell.org downloads page](https://www.haskell.org/downloads).
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Some supporting non-Haskell libraries are required to build
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Cryptol. Most should already be present for your operating system, but
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you may need to install the following:
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- [The GNU Multiple Precision Arithmetic Library (GMP)](https://gmplib.org/)
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- [ncurses](https://www.gnu.org/software/ncurses/)
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You'll also need [Z3](#getting-z3) installed when running Cryptol.
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## Building Cryptol
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From the Cryptol source directory, run:
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make
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This will build Cryptol in place. From there, there are additional targets:
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- `make run`: run Cryptol in the current directory
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- `make test`: run the regression test suite (note: 4 failures is expected)
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- `make docs`: build the Cryptol documentation (requires
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[pandoc](http://johnmacfarlane.net/pandoc/) and
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[TeX Live](https://www.tug.org/texlive/))
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- `make tarball`: build a tarball with a relocatable Cryptol binary and documentation
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- `make dist`: build a platform-specific distribution. On all
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platforms except Windows, this is currently equivalent to `make
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tarball`. On Windows, this will build an `.msi` package using
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[WiX Toolset 3.8](http://wixtoolset.org/), which must be installed
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separately.
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## Installing Cryptol
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If you run `cabal install` in your source directory after running one
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of these `make` targets, you will end up with a binary in
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`.cabal-sandbox/bin/cryptol`. You can either use that binary directly,
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or use the results of `tarball` or `dist` to install Cryptol in a
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location of your choice.
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## Configuring Cryptol
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Cryptol depends on several external files for complete operation. These
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files are contained in the `lib` directory of the Cryptol repository. If
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you install with `cabal install`, these files will be automaticall
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copied into a directory that the `cryptol` executable can find. If you
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install in other ways, you will have to do more manual configuration.
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There are two options:
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* Copy the contents of the `lib` directory into `$HOME/.cryptol`.
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* Set the `CRYPTOLPATH` environment variable to name some other
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directory that contains those files.
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# Contributing
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We believe that anyone who uses Cryptol is making an important
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contribution toward making Cryptol a better tool. There are many ways
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to get involved.
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## Users
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If you write Cryptol programs that you think would benefit the
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community, fork the GitHub repository, and add them to the
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`examples/contrib` directory and submit a pull request.
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We host a Cryptol mailing list, which
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you can [join here](https://groups.google.com/a/galois.com/forum/#!forum/cryptol-users).
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If you run into a bug in Cryptol, if something doesn't make sense in
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the documentation, if you think something could be better, or if you
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just have a cool use of Cryptol that you'd like to share with us, use
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the issues page on [GitHub](https://github.com/GaloisInc/cryptol), or
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send email to <cryptol@galois.com>.
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## Developers
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If you'd like to get involved with Cryptol development, see the list of
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[low-hanging fruit](https://github.com/GaloisInc/cryptol/labels/low-hanging%20fruit). These
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are tasks which should be straightforward to implement. Make a
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fork of this GitHub repository, send along pull requests and we'll
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be happy to incorporate your changes.
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### Repository Structure
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- `/cryptol`: Haskell sources for the front-end `cryptol` executable
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and read-eval-print loop
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- `/docs`: LaTeX and Markdown sources for the Cryptol documentation
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- `/examples`: Cryptol sources implementing several interesting
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algorithms
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- `/lib`: Cryptol standard library sources
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- `/src`: Haskell sources for the `cryptol` library (the bulk of the
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implementation)
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- `/tests`: Haskell sources for the Cryptol regression test suite, as
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well as the Cryptol sources and expected outputs that comprise that
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suite
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# Where to Look Next
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The `docs` directory of the installation package contains an
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introductory book, the `examples` directory contains a number of
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algorithms specified in Cryptol.
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If you are familiar with version 1 of Cryptol, you should read the
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`Version2Changes` document in the `docs` directory.
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Cryptol is still under active development at Galois. We are also
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building tools that consume both Cryptol specifications and
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implementations in (for example) C or Java, and can (with some amount
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of work) allow you to verify that an implementation meets its
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specification. Email us at <cryptol@galois.com> if you're interested
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in these capabilities.
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# Thanks!
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We hope that Cryptol is useful as a tool for educators and students,
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commercial and open source authors of cryptographic implementations,
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and by cryptographers to
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* specify cryptographic algorithms
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* check or prove properties of algorithms
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* generate test vectors for testing implementations
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* experiment with new algorithms
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## Acknowledgements
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Cryptol has been under development for over a decade with many people
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contributing to its design and implementation. Those people include
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(but are not limited to) Iavor Diatchki, Aaron Tomb, Adam Wick, Brian
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Huffman, Dylan McNamee, Joe Kiniry, John Launchbury, Matt Sottile,
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Adam Foltzer, Joe Hendrix, Trevor Elliott, Lee Pike, Mark Tullsen,
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Levent Erkök, David Lazar, Joel Stanley, Jeff Lewis, Andy Gill, Edward
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Yang, Ledah Casburn, Jim Teisher, Sigbjørn Finne, Mark Shields, Philip
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Weaver, Magnus Carlsson, Fergus Henderson, Joe Hurd, Thomas Nordin,
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John Matthews and Sally Browning. In addition, much of the work on
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Cryptol has been funded by, and lots of design input was provided by
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the team at the
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[NSA's Trusted Systems Research Group](http://www.nsa.gov/research/ia_research/),
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including Brad Martin, Frank Taylor and Sean Weaver.
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Portions of Cryptol are also based upon work supported by the Office
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of Naval Research under Contract No. N68335-17-C-0452. Any opinions,
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findings and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this
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material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect
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the views of the Office of Naval Research.
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