Scyther with my modifications
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Cas Cremers 7a2d354bac Added Wimax models from compositionality paper.
Previously we had not included the IEEE 802.16e Wimax PKM models to the
Scyther distribution, although the models had been around for years.
2012-11-27 21:56:05 +01:00
design Removed huge file; unclear why this was in here anyway. 2010-05-11 10:58:38 +02:00
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scripts Added loop script which I had always wanted before. 2008-08-21 21:55:55 +02:00
src We now also allow macro definitions in roles, and allow for macro overwrite. 2012-11-23 14:34:06 +01:00
testing Cleanup and restructuring of testing directory setup. 2012-11-15 16:47:08 +01:00
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The Scyther tool repository

This README describes the organization of the repository of the Scyther tool for security protocol analysis. Its intended audience are interested users and future developers of the Scyther tool, as well as protocol modelers. For installation and usage instructions of the Scyther tool see: http://people.inf.ethz.ch/cremersc/scyther/index.html.

Developing

We use Linux during the development of Scyther, but development on Windows and MAC OS X should be equally feasible. Note that the below instructions are written from a Linux/Ubuntu perspective, and probably need modifications for other platforms.

Scyther is written partly in Python (for the GUI, using wxPython) and partly in C (for the backend).

In order to run the tool from a repository checkout, it is required to compile the C sources into a working binary for the backend. The simplest way to achieve this is to run the build.sh script in the ./src directory. This script compiles a binary version of the tool on the native platform. Thus, in the Linux case, it should produce ./src/scyther-linux. This file is automatically copied to the related directory under ./gui, and if successful you can attempt to run ./gui/scyther-gui.py to use the graphical user interface.

The build process depends on the following (Debian/Ubuntu) packages:

  • cmake
  • build-essential
  • flex
  • bison

If you are using Ubuntu, installing these may be as simple as running

sudo apt-get install cmake build-essential flex bison

In case you also want to be able to compile Windows binaries from Linux, you also need:

  • mingw32

Note that welcome all contributions, e.g., further protocol models. Just send us a pull request.

Manual

We are currently rewriting the manual. Bear with us for a second and have a look at the example protocol models.

Protocol Models

The protocol models have the extension .spdl and can be found in the following directories:

  • ./gui/Protocols, containing the officially released models, and
  • ./testing, containing models currently under development.

License

Currently these Scyther sources are licensed under the GPL 2, as indicated in the source code. Contact Cas Cremers if you have any questions.