Internet DRAFT - draft-fairhurst-taps-neat
draft-fairhurst-taps-neat
TSVWG G. Fairhurst
Internet-Draft T. Jones
Intended status: Informational University of Aberdeen
Expires: May 15, 2018 A. Brunstrom
Karlstad University
D. Ros
Simula Research Laboratory
November 13, 2017
The NEAT Interface to Transport Services
draft-fairhurst-taps-neat-01
Abstract
The NEAT System provides an example of a system designed to implement
the TAPS Transport Services. This document presents the transport
services that the NEAT User API provides to an application or upper-
layer protocol. It also describes primitives needed to interface to
the NEAT Policy Manager and how policies can be adjusted to match the
API behaviour to the properties required by an application or upper-
layer protocol using the NEAT User API.
Status of this Memo
This Internet-Draft is submitted in full conformance with the
provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79.
Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering
Task Force (IETF). Note that other groups may also distribute
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Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months
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material or to cite them other than as "work in progress."
This Internet-Draft will expire on May 15, 2018.
Copyright Notice
Copyright (c) 2017 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
document authors. All rights reserved.
This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
Provisions Relating to IETF Documents (http://trustee.ietf.org/
license-info) in effect on the date of publication of this document.
Please review these documents carefully, as they describe your rights
and restrictions with respect to this document. Code Components
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extracted from this document must include Simplified BSD License text
as described in Section 4.e of the Trust Legal Provisions and are
provided without warranty as described in the Simplified BSD License.
Table of Contents
1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
2. The NEAT Context . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
3. NEAT User API Primitives and Events . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
3.1. NEAT Flow Initialisation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
3.2. NEAT Flow Establishment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
3.3. NEAT Flow Availability . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
3.4. Writing and reading data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
3.5. Flow Maintenance Primitives . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
3.6. NEAT Flow Termination . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
3.7. NEAT Error Events . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
4. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
5. Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
6. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
7. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
Appendix A. Revision Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
1. Introduction
The NEAT (New, Evolutive API and Transport-Layer Architecture for the
Internet) [NEAT] System provides a call-back driven API to the
network transport layer. It presents a set of transport services
[RFC8095] that the NEAT User API provides to an application or upper-
layer protocol.
The NEAT System has been implemented in the NEAT User Module. The
focus of the present document is on the NEAT User API providing
transport services to applications. This utilises a lower interface
provided by a Kernel Programming Interface (KPI), to access the
traditional Socket API or a transport service implemented in
userspace.
This has been designed to support one-sided deployment, and a NEAT
System can therefore exchange data with a variety of transport peers,
including:
o Another endpoint using the NEAT System
o An endpoint using native TCP, UDP, or UDP-Lite.
o An endpoint using SCTP (with explicit use of multi-streaming)
o WebRTC broswers
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Applications that use the NEAT User API can provide information about
the features desired from the transport layer and determine the
properties of the offered transport service. It is this additional
information that enables the NEAT System to move beyond the
constraints of the traditional Socket API, since the stack then
becomes aware of what the application/user actually desires or
requires for each traffic flow. The additional information can be
used to automatically identify which transport components (protocol
and other transport mechanisms) could be used to realise the required
transport service. This can drive the selection by the NEAT System
of the best transport components to use and determine how these need
to be configured [I-D.grinnemo-taps-he]. In making decisions, the
NEAT System can utilise policy information provided at configuration,
previously discovered path characteristics and probing techniques.
This can be provided by a policy manager acting below the NEAT User
API.
+-------------+
| Application |
+-------------+
| /\ Events & Primitives, Set/Get Properties
\/ |
-+-+-+-+-+-+ Callback-based NEAT User API
| /\
\/ |
+------------+ Properties +-----------+ +-----------+
| NEAT |----------->| Policy |<----| Policy |
| Logic |<-----------| Manager | | Info Base |
+------------+ Candidates +-----------+ +-----------+
| | |
+-----------+ +-----------+ +-----------+
| Transport | | Transport | | Path Char.|
| Protocol | | Protocol | | Info Base |
+-----------+ ... +-----------+ +-----------+
| | |
-------------------------------------------
| |
+-----------+ +-----------+
| Network | | Network |
| Interface | | Interface |
+-----------+ ... +-----------+
Figure 1: An abstract presentation of the NEAT Architecture and User API.
The architecture of the NEAT System is presented in [D1.1], and
depicted in Figure 1. Some important features of NEAT compared to the
existing Sockets API are:
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o Event-driven call-back driven interface, enabling applications to
be designed to respond to events, such as a signal indictaing
reception of data blocks, the ability to send data blocks, or the
successful transmission of data blocks. This concrete API is
described in [D2.3].
o High-level transport interface, independent of the selected
transport protocol, allowing applications to be written without
depending on the features of specific transport protocols, and
hence allowing the most suitable transport protocol to be matched
to the application, based on the transport features an application
requires [RFC8095].
o Support for either unordered/unreliable or reliable transport
services.
o A choice between automatized and explicit support for
multistreaming.
o Explicit support of multipath transport protocols and network
architectures.
o A flexible policy framework, allowing applications to describes
the properties they expect or those they require of the transport
system and thus enabling the transport services to be configured
to match the capabilities of the network that is being used.
o Ability to work with other network-layer protocols (e.g., network
signalling) to realise the required transport service.
The NEAT Library is an open source implementation and is available
for download [NEAT-GIT]. This also provides tutorials and examples
of code utilising the API and descriptions of the way in the which
callback mechanisms can be used to build applications that use this
interface. Further documentation for the current NEAT System is
available at the NEAT Project web page, [NEAT-DOC].
2. The NEAT Context
Applications interact with the network by sending, receiving and
controlling NEAT Flows.
The first step in establishing a flow with the NEAT System is to call
a primitive to create and configure a Context. In the remainder of
this document, the label P: is used to identify a primitive that may
be called for a NEAT Context, and the label E: to identify an event
provided by the NEAT System. Each primitive/event is associated with
a particular NEAT Context. Most primitives specify the Context and
provide a handle to the NEAT Flow upon which they operate, and the
primitives and events for manipulating data can only be used after a
NEAT Flow has been created.
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P: INIT_CTX()
The INIT_CTX primitive sets up the datastructures needed by the NEAT
System.
After all network operations are completed it can free the context.
It returns a pointer to the newly allocated and initialized NEAT
context.
P: FREE_CTX()
The FREE_CTX primitive is called when an created context is no longer
needed. It frees the memory associated with the datastructures used
by the NEAT System.
3. NEAT User API Primitives and Events
An application using the NEAT System needs to take the following
steps to use the network after establishing a context:
1. Initialisation: create a flow by calling P: INIT_FLOW; and then
calling P: SET_PROPERTIES to express the application
requirements. This is used by the NEAT policy manager. Finally,
it needs to bind call-back functions to respond to the events
generated by the NEAT System.
2. Establishment / Availability: Connect the NEAT Flow (either
actively to a destination endpoint or passively to receive from
the network).
3. Writing and reading data: Call primitives to write data or
respond to events requesting it to read data.
4. Maintenance: Call maintenance primitives, as needed, to configure
attributes of the flow (e.g., while writing reading data).
5. Termination: Close (or abort) the NEAT Flow.
3.1. NEAT Flow Initialisation
An application needs to create and initialise a flow object before it
can be used.
P: INIT_FLOW()
The INIT_FLOW primitive creates the essential data structures
required to use a NEAT Flow. The application also needs to then call
a primitive to associate functions with each of the events that it
wishes to process.
P: SET_PROPERTIES( property_list )
property_list : A set of flow properties expressed in JSON.
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Each NEAT Flow has a set of properties that are set at the flow
initialisation time. The SET_PROPERTIES primitive sets properties
for the NEAT Flow. Properties are related to Transport Features and
Services. For instance: link-layer security, transport-layer
security, certificate verification, certificate and key properties
can be set at initialisation time are related to a Confidentiality
Transport Feature. A flow can also have attributes that can be read
by an application using maintenance primitives after a flow has been
initialised.
3.2. NEAT Flow Establishment
P: OPEN( destname port [stream_count] )
destname : a NEAT-conformant name (which can be a DNS name or a
set of IP addresses) to which to connect.
port : port number (integer) or service name (string) to which to
connect.
stream_count : the number of requested streams to open (integer).
Note that, if this parameter is not used, the system may still use
multi-streaming underneath, e.g., by automatically mapping NEAT
Flows between the same hosts onto streams of an SCTP association.
Using this parameter disables such automatic functionality.
Returns: success or failure. If success, it also returns a handle
for a NEAT Flow.
The OPEN primitive opens a flow actively for transports that require
a connection handshake (e.g., TCP, SCTP), and opens the flow
passively for transports that do not (e.g., UDP, UDP-Lite). Calling
P:OPEN alone may not actually have an effect "on the wire", i.e., a
P: ACCEPT at the peer may not be triggered by it. Since it is
possible that the remote endpoint only returns when data arrives,
this may only happen after the local host has called P: WRITE. (This
does not result in a problem, since P: ACCEPT does not block).
E: on_connected
The on_connected event indicates a successful connection setup. An
application that receives this event can then use other primitives
with this flow.
P: OPEN_WITH_EARLY_DATA( destname port [stream_count] [flow_group]
[stream] [pr_method pr_value] [unordered_flag] data datalen)
destname : defined in the same way as in P: OPEN.
port : defined in the same way as in P: OPEN.
stream_count : defined in the same way as in P: OPEN.
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flow_group : defined in the same way as in P: OPEN.
stream : the number of the stream to be used. At the moment this
function is called, a connection is still not initialised and the
protocol may not be known. If the protocol chosen by the NEAT
Selection components supports only one stream, this parameter will
be ignored.
pr_method and pr_value : if these parameters are used, then
partial reliability is enabled and pr_method must have an integer
value from 1 to 2 to specify which method to implement partial
reliability is requested. Value 1 means: pr_value specifies a
time in milliseconds after which it is unnecessary to send this
data block. Value 2 means: pr_value specifies a re- quested
maximum number of attempts to retransmit the data block. If the
selected NEAT transport does not support partial reliability these
parameters will be ignored. (See P: WRITE for more information).
unordered_flag : The data block may be delivered out-of-order if
this boolean flag is set. Default: false. If the protocol chosen
by the NEAT Selection components does not support unordered
delivery, this parameter will be ignored.
data : the data-block to be sent.
datalen : the amount (positive integer) of data supplied in the
data-block.
Returns: success or failure. If success, it also returns a handle
for a NEAT Flow and the amount of supplied data that was buffered.
The OPEN_WITH_EARLY_DATA primitive allows data to be sent at the time
when a flow is opened. To accommodate TLS 1.3 [I-D.ietf-tls-tls13]
early data and the TCP Fast Open option [RFC7413], application data
need to be supplied at the time of opening a NEAT Flow. This
primitive opens a flow and sends early data if the protocol supports
it. If the protocol chosen does not support early application data.
The data will be buffered then sent after connection establishment,
similar to calling P: WRITE. For this reason, in addition to the
parameters of P: OPEN, this primitive also needs the same parameters
as P: WRITE. The supplied data can be delivered multiple times
(replayed by the network); an application must take this into account
when using this function. This is commonly known as idempotence.
3.3. NEAT Flow Availability
This section describes how an application prepares a flow to accept
communication from another NEAT endpoint.
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P: ACCEPT( [name] port [stream_count] )
name : local NEAT-conformant name (which can be a DNS name or a
set of IP addresses) to constrain acceptance of incoming requests
to local address(es). If this is missing, requests may arrive at
any local address.
port : local port number (integer) or service name (string), to
constrain acceptance to incoming requests at this port.
stream_count : the number of requested streams to open (integer).
Default value: 1.
Returns: one or more destination IP addresses, information about
which destination IP address is used by default, inbound stream
count (= the outbound stream count that was requested on the other
side), and outbound stream count (= maximum number of allowed
outbound streams).
The ACCEPT primitive prepares a NEAT Flow to receive network data.
UDP and UDP-Lite do not natively support a POSIX-style accept
mechanism; in this case, NEAT emulates this functionality. P: ACCEPT
can only return once data arrives, not necessarily after the peer has
called P: OPEN (The callback-based implementation does not have this
problem because P: ACCEPT does not block).
E: on_connected
The on_connected event indicates a NEAT peer endpoint has connected,
and other primitives can then be used.
3.4. Writing and reading data
The primitives in this section refer to actions that may be performed
an open NEAT Flow, i.e., a NEAT Flow that was either actively
established or successfully made available for receiving data. It
permits an application to send and receive data-blocks over the API.
E: on_writable
The on_writable event indicates there is buffer space available and
the application may write new data using P:WRITE.
P: P: WRITE( [stream] [pr_method pr_value] [unordered_flag] data
datalen )
stream : the number of the stream to be used (positive integer).
This can be omitted if the NEAT Flow contains only one stream.
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pr_method and pr_value : if these parameters are used, then
partial reliability is enabled and pr_method must have an integer
value from 1 to 2 to specify which method to implement partial
reliability is requested. Value 1 means: pr_value specifies a
time in milliseconds after which it is unnecessary to send this
data-block. Value 2 means: pr_value specifies a requested maximum
number of attempts to retransmit the data-block. If the selected
NEAT transport does not support partial reliability these
parameters will be ignored
unordered_flag : The data block may be delivered out-of-order if
this boolean flag is set. Default: false. If the protocol chosen
by the NEAT Selection components does not support unordered
delivery, this parameter will be ignored.
data : The data block to be sent.
datalen : the amount (positive integer) of data supplied in data.
The WRITE primitive provide a NEAT Flow with a data block for
transmission to the remote NEAT peer endpoint (with reliability
limited by the conditions specified via pr_method, pr_value and the
transport protocol used). NEAT Flows can support message delineation
as a property of the NEAT Flow that is set via the INIT_FLOW
primitive (S. 2.2.1). If a NEAT Flow supports message delineation,
the data block is a complete message.
E: on_all_written
The on_all_written event indicates that all data requested to be
written using P:WRITE has been sent.
E: on_send_failure
The on_send_failure event may be returned instead of E:on_all_written
when the NEAT System was temporarily unable to complete a P:WRITE
call, and it not known that all data has been written.
E: on_readable
The on_readable event indicates there is data available for the
application that may be read using P:READ.
P: READ( )
data : the received data block.
datalen : the amount of data received.
Returns: [unordered_flag] [stream_id] data datalen. If a message
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arrives out of order, this is indicated by the unordered_flag. If
the underlying transport protocol supports streams, the stream_id
parameter is set.
The READ primitive reads a data block from a NEAT Flow into a
provided buffer. If a NEAT Flow supports message delineation, the
data block is a complete message.
3.5. Flow Maintenance Primitives
The primitives and events below are out-of-band calls that can be
issued at any time after a NEAT Flow has been opened and before it
has been terminated.
P: CHANGE_TIMEOUT( toval )
toval : the timeout value in seconds.
The CHANGE_TIMEOUT primitive adjusts the time after which a NEAT Flow
will terminate if the written data could not be delivered. If this
is not called, NEAT will make an automatic default choice for the
timeout.
P: SET_PRIMARY( dst_IP_address )
dst_IP_address : the destination IP address that should be used as
the primary address.
The SET_PRIMARY primitive is to be used with NEAT Flows that have
multiple destination IP addresses, with protocols that do not use
load sharing. It should not have an effect otherwise. This will
overrule this general per-flow setting. If this is not called, the
NEAT System will make an automatic default choice for the destination
IP address.
P: SET_LOW_WATERMARK( watermark)
watermark : upper limit of unsent data in the socket buffer, in
bytes.
The SET_LOW_WATERMARK primitive allows the application to limit the
amount of unsent data in the underlying socket buffer. If set, NEAT
will only execute E: WRITABLE when the amount of unsent data falls
below the watermark. This allows applications to reduce sender-side
queuing delay.
P: SET_MIN_CHECKSUM_COVERAGE( length )
length : The number of bytes that must be covered by the checksum
for a datagram to be delivered to the application.
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The SET_MIN_CHECKSUM_COVERAGE primitive allows an application to set
the minimum acceptable checksum coverage length. This primitive only
has effect for a received UDP-Lite datagram. A receiver that
receives a UDP-Lite datagram with a smaller coverage length will not
hand over the data to the receiving application. This is ignored for
other protocols, where all data are fully covered by the checksum.
P: SET_CHECKSUM_COVERAGE( length )
length : sets the number of bytes covered by the checksum on
outgoing UDP-Lite datagrams. This is ignored for other protocols,
where all data are fully covered by the checksum.
The SET_CHECKSUM_COVERAGE primitive allows an application to set the
number of bytes covered by the checksum in a UDP-Lite datagram. This
only has effect when the UDP-Lite protocol is selected.
P: SET_TTL( ttl )
ttl : the hop limit to be used for reception.
The SET_TTL primitive sets the minimum IPv4 TTL or IPv6 Hop Count on
a datagram that is required for it to be passed to the application.
E: on_network_status_changed
The on_network_status_changed event informs the application that
something has happened in the network; it is safe to ignore without
harm by many applications. A status code indicates what has happened
in accordance with a table that includes at least the following three
values: 1) ICMP error message arrived; 2) Excessive retransmissions;
3) one or more destination IP addresses have become available/
unavailable.
P: GET_PROPERTY( property )
property : string with a property name, expressed as JSON.
Returns: value set to the property returned by the Policy Manager,
expressed as JSON.
The GET_PROPERTY primitive allows an application to discover the
value assigned to a property by the Policy Manager. Properties are
expressed as part of policies and handled by the NEAT Policy Manager
and can only be read by an application once a flow has been
initialised.
These currently are:
o Transport parameters: Parameters used (e.g., congestion control
mechanism, TCP sysctl parameters, . . . ). This property gives the
application a more concrete view of the choices that were made.
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o Interface statistics: Interface MTU, addresses, connection type
(link layer), etc.
o Path statistics: Experienced RTT, packet loss (rate), jitter,
throughput, path MTU, etc
o UsedDSCP: The DSCP assigned to an active NEAT Flow. This may
differ from the requested DSCP when the QoS has been mapped by the
policy system
3.6. NEAT Flow Termination
This set of primitives and events are related to gracefully or
forcefully closing a NEAT Flow, or being informed about this
happening.
P: CLOSE( )
The CLOSE primitive terminates a NEAT Flow after satisfying all the
requirements that were specified regarding the delivery of data that
the application has already given to NEAT. If the peer still has data
to send, it cannot then be received after this call. Data buffered
by the NEAT System that has not yet been given to the network layer
will be discarded.
E: on_close
The on_close event informs the application that a NEAT Flow was
successfully closed. This can be received at any time for an active
NEAT Flow.
P: ABORT( )
The ABORT primitive terminates a connection without delivering
remaining data.
E: on_aborted
The on_aborted event informs the application that the other side has
aborted the NEAT Flow. The event can be received at any time for an
active NEAT Flow.
E: on_timeout
The on_timeout event informs the application that the NEAT Flow is
aborted because the default timeout has been reached before data
could be delivered. This timeout adjusted by the P: CHANGE_TIMEOUT
NEAT Flow maintenance primitive. The event can be received at any
time for an active NEAT Flow.
3.7. NEAT Error Events
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Errors that occur within the NEAT System or that are notified by the
network result in an on_error event:
E: on_error
This event notifies a hard or soft error to the upper layer using the
NEAT System.
4. Security Considerations
This document is about the design and usage of a transport API. The
transport protocols accessed via this API each have security
considerations.
The API may be used to request the use of security protocols accessed
via the transport API.
5. Acknowledgements
This work was partially funded by the European Union's Horizon 2020
research and innovation programme under grant agreement No. 644334
(NEAT). The views expressed are solely those of the author(s).
6. IANA Considerations
XX RFC ED - PLEASE REMOVE THIS SECTION XXX
This memo includes no request to IANA.
7. References
[D1.1] Fairhurst, G., Jones, T., Damjanovic, D., Eckert, K.,
Grinnemo, K., Hansen, A., Mangiante, S., McManus, P.,
Papastergiou, G., Ros, D., Vyncke, E., Welzl, M. and M.
Tuexen, "The NEAT Architecture (D1.1)", 2015, <https://www
.neat-project.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/D1.1.pdf>.
[D2.3] Khademi, N., Bozakov, Z., Brunstroem, A., Dale, O.,
Damjanovic, D., Evensen, KR., Fairhurst, G., Fischer, A.,
Grinnemo, K., Jones, T., Mangiante, S., Petlund, A., Ros,
D., Ruengeler, I., Stenberg, D., Tuexen, M., Weinrank, F.
and M. Welzl, "The Final Version of Core Transport System
(D2.3)", 2017, <https://www.neat-project.org/wp-content/
uploads/2017/10/D2.3.pdf>.
[I-D.grinnemo-taps-he]
Grinnemo, K., Brunstrom, A., Hurtig, P., Khademi, N. and
Z. Bozakov, "Happy Eyeballs for Transport Selection",
Internet-Draft draft-grinnemo-taps-he-03, July 2017.
[I-D.ietf-tls-tls13]
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Rescorla, E., "The Transport Layer Security (TLS) Protocol
Version 1.3", Internet-Draft draft-ietf-tls-tls13-21, July
2017.
[NEAT-DOC]
Stenberg, D., Weinrank, F., Khademi, N., Dreibholz, T.,
Jones, T., Bozakov, Z. and O. Dale, "NEAT Programming API
Documentation", , <http://neat.readthedocs.io/>.
[NEAT-GIT]
"NEAT Source Code Repository", , <https://github.com/neat-
project/neat>.
[NEAT] "The EU New, Evolutive API and Transport-Layer
Architecture for the Internet (NEAT) Project", 2017,
<https://www.neat-project.org/>.
[RFC7413] Cheng, Y., Chu, J., Radhakrishnan, S. and A. Jain, "TCP
Fast Open", RFC 7413, DOI 10.17487/RFC7413, December 2014,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7413>.
[RFC8095] Fairhurst, G., Ed., Trammell, B.Ed., and M. Kuehlewind,
Ed., "Services Provided by IETF Transport Protocols and
Congestion Control Mechanisms", RFC 8095, DOI 10.17487/
RFC8095, March 2017, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/
rfc8095>.
Appendix A. Revision Information
-00 This is an individual draft for the IETF community, for
consideration by the IETF TAPS WG.
-01 Contains corrections to INIT_FLOW; fixes to typos; and includes
the Acknolwkedgment text omitted by mistake in -00.
Authors' Addresses
Godred Fairhurst
University of Aberdeen
Department of Engineering
Fraser Noble Building
Aberdeen, AB24 3UE
Scotland
Email: gorry@erg.abdn.ac.uk
URI: http://www.erg.abdn.ac.uk/
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Tom Jones
University of Aberdeen
Department of Engineering
Fraser Noble Building
Aberdeen, AB24 3UE
Scotland
Email: tom@erg.abdn.ac.uk
URI: http://www.erg.abdn.ac.uk/
Anna Brunstrom
Karlstad University
Universitetsgatan 2
Karlstad, 651 88
Sweden
Email: anna.brunstrom@kau.se
David Ros
Simula Research Laboratory
Martin Linges vei 25
1364 Fornebu
Oslo,
Norway
Email: dros@simula.no
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