Thanks, Roop. Please turn to Slide 13. All metrics I referenced here are related to demand trends we are seeing by sector are excluding the effect of SCP. In medical, we continue to see strong demand from our existing products while also ramping new programs I'm particularly encouraged by the strong demand we are seeing in the defibrillator subsector as the benefits of having these life-saving devices readily accessible are becoming increasingly well understood. We continue to build on our future success during this past quarter, securing new wins across our offerings. For example, in manufacturing, we won a program to deliver subassembly views in medical sterilization equipment. Within engineering, we won an engagement to design fluid pumps used in field applications by the DOD. Lastly, we were pleased to be awarded a collaborative design engagement with the company to develop cardiovascular treatment devices. With the continued underlying medical product demand strength and a steadily improving supply chain, we expect solid year-over-year growth in the period and on a full year basis. Within semi cap, we're encouraged by the better performance in the quarter and believe the March quarter may have been our low point for semi cap revenue in the year. However, as I mentioned earlier, we have heard from several OEMs that the timing of the broader market recovery may be pushed out a bit further than initially anticipated. For Q3, we expect revenue to be relatively flat sequentially. However, the long-term secular growth drivers are still very much intact, including silicon penetration, the quest for ever decreasing node sizes and the global efforts to build a broader foundry ecosystem. We continue to invest in this space to capture disproportionate share as the next upswing commences. Moving to A&D sector. We continue to score new wins in defense. Just this quarter, we secured a manufacturing win to provide actuation control modules for an extension extended range guided multiple rocket system. Additionally, we expanded an existing engagement with the U.S. Army to manufacture camera systems used in live round tank gunnery training ranges. Within commercial aero, both demand and our ability to meet it continues to improve for us. Combined, we expect Q3 A&D revenues to be up double digits sequentially and year-over-year. Turning to Industrials, we position ourselves well to participate in megatrends, specifically automation, test and measurement and energy efficiency solutions. Examples of this in Q2 include a manufacturing win for geospatial devices, which enable efficiency and productivity in the agriculture and construction industries. At the same time, our design engineering teams have secured new business collaborating with customers in areas such as additive manufacturing, environmental controls and security detection platforms. Looking forward, supply conditions in industrials are showing improvement, which we anticipate will continue. We expect sector revenue to grow year-over-year in the quarter and for the full year. In advanced computing, revenues were largely consistent with our guidance provided last quarter. As a reminder, our advanced computing efforts are not in support of cloud or data center infrastructure. Rather, we helped build some of the largest and most sophisticated high-performance computing machines in the world. These are often government agency sponsored and by definition, relatively macro resilience. We highlighted last quarter that we expected to complete a significant project during the second quarter. This happened translating to a sequential decline in revenue, albeit still up nearly 20% year-over-year. Our third quarter will be the first full quarter without revenue from that completed project, translating to expectations of sequential and year-over-year declines. With the strong first half performance, coupled with a new win expected to ramp in Q4, we continue to anticipate growth in this sector on a full year basis. Lastly, and next-generation communications, we remain cautious on this sector given the carrier and operator CapEx spending rationalization that is going on in the near term. We remain well positioned to capture investment in broadband infrastructure, demand for satellite communications and new broadband connectivity programs focused on rural areas. However, some of these initiatives are exposed to infrastructure deployment delays and macro sensitivity. As such, we expect second half revenue performance to be challenged with sequential declines in each of the next two quarters. Although on a full year basis, we continue to expect growth. In summary, please turn to Slide 14. While there is always room for improvement, I'm pleased with the team's execution in the quarter. Despite the macro challenges and semi-cap cyclicality. Excluding SCP, benchmark delivered 12% annual revenue growth in the quarter. At the same time, non-GAAP operating income grew 28% or more than twice the rate of revenue growth. The working capital initiatives we discussed on last quarter's call are beginning to bear fruit with positive operating and free cash flow generated in the quarter. Looking to the second half, we expect to continue to reduce inventory and maintain our focus on operational execution, particularly as supply chains are expected to continue to improve, enabling us to fulfill more of our customer demand. We will protect investment from future growth sectors, particularly semi cap, given our conviction in the long-term secular drivers. Although as uncertain as to the shape of the recovery, we know it will come, and we will be ready for it. These collective efforts give us continued confidence we can grow revenue in the high single digits in 2023 when excluding the effects of SCP. With that, I'll now turn the call over to the operator to conduct our Q&A session.