Information about Electronic Submissions for
CRYPTO 2001
Last update: January 22, 2001
See the Call for
Papers for general submission guidelines. The actual submission server is
here. (this link will be intermittent until February 1).
Deadline: February 12, 2001, 17:00 EST.
Contents
Introduction
This is a working document describing the electronic submission
procedure for CRYPTO 2001. All electronic submissions must be
submitted through the web interface (no email or
ftp); they must be in printable PostScript form and arrive by
February 12, 2001, 17:00 EST. The server will begin operation
on February 01, 2001. Until that time, links to the server
software may be intermittent. The top-level server page is here.
Questions about the submission process may be sent to joe@pnylab.com.
The electronic submission is an experimental software. To upload your
submission, you will need to use a RFC 1867-compliant
browser. Netscape 3.0 (or later) and Microsoft Internet Explorer 4.0 (or
later) are RFC 1867-compliant. Microsoft Internet Explorer 3.0 requires
a special file upload add-on (patch) available at www.download.com (search for upload
patch). Part of the software is taken from the electronic submission
software developed by Sam Rebelsky and SIGACT's Electronic Publishing Board. However, because of
the experimental nature of the software, and because "good" postscript
files can fail to print on "good" postscript printers, the program
committee cannot assume responsiblity for technical problems, although
we will do our best to make sure that no such problems occur. For this
reason we request that you submit your paper as early as possible.
In addition, please keep in mind the following:
-
When you send in a submission, the server generates an MD5 "receipt" for
the submission. In case of serious server error, this lets you "prove"
to us that the submission arrived. We strongly recommend that you keep
your original PostScript file until after the deadline so that it can
be used in conjunction with the receipt for verification.
-
Withdrawals before the deadline can be done using the electronic
submissions system (for papers that have been submitted
electronically); please see the section basic
procedure for details. Withdrawals after the deadline will need
to be arranged through the program chair.
Formatting the Paper
To submit your paper electronically, you must convert your paper into
PostScript, conforming to the Document Structuring
Conventions (DSC)using letter sized
pages. Pages should appear in ascending order. You should use
standard postscript fonts (not every printer has, for example,
Transylvania-Gothic-Bold).
A4 paper size is not allowed!
It does not suffice that your text fit on the appropriate area:
If your PostScript file specifies A4 format (you can usually check
this yourself by looking at the header of the file) it cause difficulties
for many American printers. It is also important that your file conform
to the document structuring conventions, or your paper may not be processed
correctly.
If you use dvips, the appropriate command is
dvips -t letter
If you use another mechanism for generating PostScript, please contact
your technical support people.
The submissions server has a test
print feature for testing papers for printability. We strongly
recommend using it, especially if you have not used this software
before or are using a new document preparation package. However, the
submissions server can not detect papers that are legal postscript but
violate the DSC conventions. Also, this test service will be turned
off 24 hours before the deadline to reduce the load on the server
during the critical period.
Anonymity
Your submission should have no identifying information. It is therefore
crucial that when you submit you paper, you include proper contact information.
The contact field should have one valid email address.
Does my postscript file conform to the document structuring
conventions?
Our experience is that most, but not all postscript files produced today
conform to the document structuring conventions (DSC). DSC files have header
information specifying such information as the number of pages, the ordering
of the pages and the paper size (and many other optional comments as well).
Here is an example of the beginning of such a header:
%!PS-Adobe-2.0
%%Creator: dvipsk 5.58f Copyright 1986, 1994 Radical Eye Software
%%Title: coloring.dvi
%%Pages: 15
%%PageOrder: Ascend
%%BoundingBox: 0 0 612 792
%%DocumentPaperSizes: letter
%%EndComments
%DVIPSCommandLine: /usr/local/bin/dvips coloring.dvi -o coloring.ps -t
%+ letter
....
Pages begin with a line of the form
%%Page:...
If your paper looks like this, you are probably in good shape. To be sure,
contact your systems support person. A fuller description of these conventions
is given in the PostScript Language Reference Manual (second edition),
Appendix G.
If your postscript file is not DSC compliant, do NOT attempt
to manually make it compliant by inserting lines from the example! Ask
your systems support person for help. Unfortunately, we do not have the
resources to help you ourselves.
Basic Procedure
The electronic submission procedure involves filling out a Submission Form through the web
interface. The form has the following fields:
Title: | title of document. |
Authors: | list of authors separated by "and". |
Contact: | e-mail address of a contact person for this paper. |
Paper: | Full pathname of the file to be uploaded. You can use the browse button to help select the file. |
The contents of the authors and contacts fields will be used in
processing the documents, but will not be read by the program
committee. Also, note that any newline character encountered in these
entries will be ignored.
It is possible to practice submitting a paper before doing
the real submission. Simply fill out all the fields and submit the
form. You will receive an MD5 receipt and a unique id for the
submission. Then, you can upload as many revisions as you would like
using the given unique id.
Here is an example of an email you will get after your submission
is received.
From: joe@pnylab.com Thu Jan 8 19:18:41 2000
To: ron@nostalgia.mit.edu
Subject: Submission of "on encryption" to CRYPTO 2001 Conference Received
Your submission has been received. Its bookkeeping information is as follows:
Title: on encryption
Contact Person: ron@nostalgia.mit.edu
Authors: Ronald Rivest
Unique ID: encryption.ps.38850975d19b8
Receipt: 8e86288eeeed8dcf4fb5ef76c7f22d20
Please keep this information for future reference.
The procedure for electronically submitting a revision through a
Revision Form is similar to
the procedure described earlier for submission. The difference is that you must
supply a Unique ID that was sent to you via email after we receive
your original submission. The rest of the fields are the same and are
optional. Once a revision is received, an email notification will be
sent to the specified contact person. If this email address is
different from the previous contact, a notification will also be sent
to the previous contact email address.
Unique ID: | Unique ID of this
submission.This string is sent to you after we receive your
submission. Later revisions of the submission must be accompanied by
this string. |
Title: | title of document. |
Authors: | list of authors separated by "and". |
Contact: | e-mail address of a contact person for this paper. |
Paper: | Full pathname of the file to be uploaded. You can use the browse button to help select the file. |
Here is an example of an email you will get after your revision is received.
From: joe@pnylab.com Thu Sep 8 19:18:41 1994
To: ron@nostalgia.mit.edu
Subject: Revision of "on encryption" to CRYPTO 2001 Conference Received
Your submission has been received. Its bookkeeping information is as follows:
Title: on encryption
Contact Person: ron@nostalgia.mit.edu
Authors: Ronald Rivest
Unique ID: encryption.ps.38850975d19b8
Receipt: 8e86288eeeed8dcf4fb5ef76c7f22d20
Please keep this information for future reference.
Withdrawal
One can withdraw a previously submitted paper using a Withdrawal Form. You must
supply at least the unique id of the paper.
Unique ID: | Unique ID of this
submission.This string is sent to you after we receive your
submission. Later revisions of the submission must be accompanied by
this string. |
Title: | title of document. |
Authors: | list of authors separated by "and". |
A notification of withdrawal will be sent via email to the contact
person.
Test PostScript File
It is possible to test printability of your PostScript file. The
server will return a message regarding the success or failure of the
printing process. However, the server does not test for full
compliance with the submission guidelines. Hence, a submission may
pass this test and still be rejected without consideration of its
merits.
We have also found that some PostScript successfully passes through
the testing process, but is not printable. For example, FrameMaker(tm)
generates PostScript(tm) that is only printable on a particular size of
paper (if generated for A4, it will not print on letter, and vice versa).
All papers must be generated for letter-sized paper.
To test a PostScript file, simply fill out the name of the file in the Test Form.
So you want to use Microsoft Word?
The server, and most of the people it was created by and designed for,
work in a Unix environment. Not surprisingly, those working in a Microsoft
Windows environment have had more trouble interfacing with the server.
The problems are twofold: obtaining a properly formatted PostScript file
and sending it to the server.
First, many Windows-based programs do not seem to know how to output
PostScript themselves, but allow you to do so indirectly by printing the
file, and using the print options. Here is one possible way to get a PostScript
output from Microsoft Word.
-
First, use the command "file:print" (the "print" command from the
"file" pull-down menu. At this point a dialog box popped up. Among
other things, it gave a description of the printer it is printing to,
for example, HP Laserjet 4/4M Plus PS 600. It is not clear how
important the details are, but it should be a postscript printer if
you are to get postscript output. Note that even if you don't have
such a printer, you can still download and install the driver for it
(for example, start at http://www.hp.com/cposupport/eschome.html).
Ultimately, the paper will be "printed" to a file and never sent to an
acual machine.
-
Then check the box labelled Print to file.
-
Next, select the button entitled Properties. This opened up
a dialog box call Document Properties.
-
In this box, select the button entitled Options. This opened
up a window called Advanced Document Properties.
-
Set resolution to 600 DPI (this probably doesn't matter much). Select
the option called Substitute device font for truetype font (it
is unclear if this has any effect). Check the box marked page
independence - this seems to be a VERY IMPORTANT
option for our software to work.
-
Then hit OK wherever you can until the damn thing prints. On
the way it may ask you for a file name. This should be irrelevant.
Once you have a good postscript file, you have to get it safely away
from your Windows platform before it is corrupted. It is recommended
that you test printability well before
the deadline with a preliminary version of your file and be prepared
to mail in a paper copy if you can't get it to work.
(return to the table of contents)
Credits
The software used to manage
electronic submission to CRYPTO 2001 is a collection of PHP scripts
written by Chanathip
Namprempre (cnamprem@cs.ucsd.edu) and some
perl scripts written by Sam Rebelsky and SIGACT's Electronic Publishing
Board. The present instruction document was greatly based on the
prototype help file which accompanies the system and on the respective
document which was used for WDAG'97. We gratefully acknowledge all
their help.
PostScript is a registered trademark of Adobe Systems
Incorporated. Unix is a registered trademark of AT&T. Netscape is
a registered trademark of Netscape Corporation. Microsoft Windows,
Microsoft Word, and Microsoft Internet Explorer are registered
trademarks of Microsoft.
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