253 lines
6.1 KiB
Markdown
253 lines
6.1 KiB
Markdown
# Keypairs.js
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Lightweight JavaScript RSA and ECDSA utils that work on Windows, Mac, and Linux
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using modern node.js APIs (no need for C compiler).
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A thin wrapper around [Eckles.js (ECDSA)](https://git.coolaj86.com/coolaj86/eckles.js/)
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and [Rasha.js (RSA)](https://git.coolaj86.com/coolaj86/rasha.js/).
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# Features
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* [x] Generate keypairs
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* [x] RSA
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* [x] ECDSA (P-256, P-384)
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* [x] PEM-to-JWK (and SSH-to-JWK)
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* [x] JWK-to-PEM (and JWK-to-SSH)
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* [x] Create JWTs (and sign JWS)
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* [x] SHA256 JWK Thumbprints
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* [ ] JWK fetching. See [Keyfetch.js](https://npmjs.com/packages/keyfetch/)
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* [ ] OIDC
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* [ ] Auth0
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* [ ] CLI
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* See [keypairs-cli](https://npmjs.com/packages/keypairs-cli/)
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<!--
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* [ ] generate CSR (DER as PEM or base64url)
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-->
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# Usage
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A brief introduction to the APIs:
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```
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// generate a new keypair as jwk
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// (defaults to EC P-256 when no options are specified)
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Keypairs.generate().then(function (pair) {
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console.log(pair.private);
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console.log(pair.public);
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});
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```
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```
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// JWK to PEM
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// (supports various 'format' and 'encoding' options)
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return Keypairs.export({ jwk: pair.private, format: 'pkcs8' }).then(function (pem) {
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console.log(pem);
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});
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```
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```
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// PEM to JWK
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return Keypairs.import({ pem: pem }).then(function (jwk) {
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console.log(jwk);
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});
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```
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```
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// Thumbprint a JWK (SHA256)
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return Keypairs.thumbprint({ jwk: jwk }).then(function (thumb) {
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console.log(thumb);
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});
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```
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```
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// Sign a JWT (aka compact JWS)
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return Keypairs.signJwt({
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jwk: pair.private
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, iss: 'https://example.com'
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, exp: '1h'
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// optional claims
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, claims: {
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, sub: 'jon.doe@gmail.com'
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}
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});
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```
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By default ECDSA keys will be used since they've had native support in node
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_much_ longer than RSA has, and they're smaller, and faster to generate.
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## API Overview
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* generate (JWK)
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* parse (PEM)
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* parseOrGenerate (PEM to JWK)
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* import (PEM-to-JWK)
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* export (JWK-to-PEM, private or public)
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* publish (Private JWK to Public JWK)
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* thumbprint (JWK SHA256)
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* signJwt
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* signJws
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#### Keypairs.generate(options)
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Generates a public/private pair of JWKs as `{ private, public }`
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Option examples:
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* RSA `{ kty: 'RSA', modulusLength: 2048 }`
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* ECDSA `{ kty: 'ECDSA', namedCurve: 'P-256' }`
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When no options are supplied EC P-256 (also known as `prime256v1` and `secp256r1`) is used by default.
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#### Keypairs.parse(options)
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Parses either a JWK (encoded as JSON) or an x509 (encdode as PEM) and gives
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back the JWK representation.
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Option Examples:
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* JWK { key: '{ "kty":"EC", ... }' }
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* PEM { key: '-----BEGIN PRIVATE KEY-----\n...' }
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* Public Key Only { key: '-----BEGIN PRIVATE KEY-----\n...', public: true }
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* Must Have Private Key { key: '-----BEGIN PUBLIC KEY-----\n...', private: true }
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Example:
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```js
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Keypairs.parse({ key: '...' }).catch(function (e) {
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// could not be parsed or was a public key
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console.warn(e);
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return Keypairs.generate();
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});
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```
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#### Keypairs.parseOrGenerate({ key, throw, [generate opts]... })
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Parses the key. Logs a warning on failure, marches on.
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(a shortcut for the above, with `private: true`)
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Option Examples:
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* parse key if exist, otherwise generate `{ key: process.env["PRIVATE_KEY"] }`
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* generated key curve `{ key: null, namedCurve: 'P-256' }`
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* generated key modulus `{ key: null, modulusLength: 2048 }`
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Example:
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```js
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Keypairs.parseOrGenerate({ key: process.env["PRIVATE_KEY"] }).then(function (pair) {
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console.log(pair.public);
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})
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```
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Great for when you have a set of shared keys for development and randomly
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generated keys in
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#### Keypairs.import({ pem: '...' }
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Takes a PEM in pretty much any format (PKCS1, SEC1, PKCS8, SPKI) and returns a JWK.
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#### Keypairs.export(options)
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Exports a JWK as a PEM.
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Exports PEM in PKCS8 (private) or SPKI (public) by default.
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Options
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```js
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{ jwk: jwk
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, public: true
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, encoding: 'pem' // or 'der'
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, format: 'pkcs8' // or 'ssh', 'pkcs1', 'sec1', 'spki'
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}
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```
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#### Keypairs.publish({ jwk: jwk, exp: '3d', use: 'sig' })
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Promises a public key that adheres to the OIDC and Auth0 spec (plus expiry), suitable to be published to a JWKs URL:
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```
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{ "kty": "EC"
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, "crv": "P-256"
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, "x": "..."
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, "y": "..."
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, "kid": "..."
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, "use": "sig"
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, "exp": 1552074208
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}
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```
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In particular this adds "use" and "exp".
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#### Keypairs.thumbprint({ jwk: jwk })
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Promises a JWK-spec thumbprint: URL Base64-encoded sha256
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#### Keypairs.signJwt({ jwk, header, claims })
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Returns a JWT (otherwise known as a protected JWS in "compressed" format).
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```js
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{ jwk: jwk
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// required claims
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, iss: 'https://example.com'
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, exp: '15m'
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// all optional claims
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, claims: {
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}
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}
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```
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Exp may be human readable duration (i.e. 1h, 15m, 30s) or a datetime in seconds.
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Header defaults:
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```js
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{ kid: thumbprint
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, alg: 'xS256'
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, typ: 'JWT'
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}
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```
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Payload notes:
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* `iat: now` is added by default (set `false` to disable)
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* `exp` must be set (set `false` to disable)
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* `iss` should be the base URL for JWK lookup (i.e. via OIDC, Auth0)
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Notes:
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`header` is actually the JWS `protected` value, as all JWTs use protected headers (yay!)
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and `claims` are really the JWS `payload`.
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#### Keypairs.signJws({ jwk, header, protected, payload })
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This is provided for APIs like ACME (Let's Encrypt) that use uncompressed JWS (instead of JWT, which is compressed).
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Options:
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* `header` not what you think. Leave undefined unless you need this for the spec you're following.
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* `protected` is the typical JWT-style header
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* `kid` and `alg` will be added by default (these are almost always required), set `false` explicitly to disable
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* `payload` can be JSON, a string, or even a buffer (which gets URL Base64 encoded)
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* you must set this to something, even if it's an empty string, object, or Buffer
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# Additional Documentation
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Keypairs.js provides a 1-to-1 mapping to the Rasha.js and Eckles.js APIs for the following:
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* generate(options)
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* import({ pem: '---BEGIN...' })
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* export({ jwk: { kty: 'EC', ... })
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* thumbprint({ jwk: jwk })
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If you want to know the algorithm-specific options that are available for those
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you'll want to take a look at the corresponding documentation:
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* See ECDSA documentation at [Eckles.js](https://git.coolaj86.com/coolaj86/eckles.js/)
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* See RSA documentation at [Rasha.js](https://git.coolaj86.com/coolaj86/rasha.js/)
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