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KaRaMeL (formerly known as KReMLin) is a tool that extracts an F* program to readable C code: K&R meets ML!
If the F* program verifies against a low-level memory model that talks about the stack and the heap; if it is first-order; if it obeys certain restrictions (e.g. non-recursive data types) then KaRaMeL will turn it into C.
The best way to learn about KaRaMeL is its work-in-progress tutorial. Pull requests and feedback are welcome!
- DESIGN.md has a technical overview of the different transformation passes performed by KaRaMeL, and is slightly out of date.
This work has been formalized on paper. We state that the compilation of such F* programs to C preserves semantics. We start from Low*, a subset of F*, and relate its semantics to CompCert's Clight.
- the ICFP 2017 Paper provides an overview of KaRaMeL as well as a paper formalization of our compilation toolchain
We have written 120,000 lines of Low* code, implementing the TLS 1.3 record layer. As such, KaRaMeL is a key component of Project Everest.
- HACL*, our High Assurance Crypto Library, provides numerous cryptographic primitives written in F*; these primitives enjoy memory safety, functional correctness, and some degree of side-channel resistance -- they extract to C via KaRaMeL.
KaRaMeL requires OCaml (>= 4.10.0), OPAM, and a recent version of GNU make.
Regarding GNU make: On OSX, this may require you to install a recent GNU
make via homebrew, and invoke gmake
instead of make
.
Regarding OCaml: Install OPAM via your package manager, then:
$ opam install ppx_deriving_yojson zarith pprint "menhir>=20161115" sedlex process fix "wasm>=2.0.0" visitors ctypes-foreign ctypes uucp
Next, make sure you have an up-to-date F*, and that you ran make
in the
ulib/ml
directory of F*. The fstar.exe
executable should be on your PATH
and FSTAR_HOME
should point to the directory where F* is installed.
To build just run make
from this directory.
Note: on OSX, KaRaMeL is happier if you have greadlink
installed (brew install coreutils
).
If you have the right version of F* and fstar.exe
is in your PATH
then you
can run the KaRaMeL test suite by doing make test
.
KaRaMeL is also available on OPAM, by running opam install karamel
.
If you installed the latest version of F* through OPAM, using opam pin add fstar --dev-repo
,
you can also install the most up-to-date version of KaRaMeL by running opam pin add karamel --dev-repo
.
File a bug if things don't work!
The --help
flag contains a substantial amount of information.
$ ./krml --help
KaRaMeL is released under the Apache 2.0 license and MIT license; see LICENSE-*
for more details.