Re: [PATCH v2 7/7] fs: cifs: switch to RC4 library interface

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On Mon, 10 Jun 2019 at 19:54, Steve French <smfrench@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> On Mon, Jun 10, 2019 at 11:17 AM Eric Biggers <ebiggers@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> >
> > Hi Steve,
> >
> > On Sun, Jun 09, 2019 at 05:03:25PM -0500, Steve French wrote:
> > > Probably harmless to change this code path (build_ntlmssp_auth_blob is
> > > called at session negotiation time so shouldn't have much of a
> > > performance impact).
> > >
> > > On the other hand if we can find optimizations in the encryption and
> > > signing paths, that would be really helpful.   There was a lot of
> > > focus on encryption performance at SambaXP last week.
> > >
> > > Andreas from Redhat gave a talk on the improvements in Samba with TLS
> > > implementation of AES-GCM.   I added the cifs client implementation of
> > > AES-GCM and notice it is now faster to encrypt packets than sign them
> > > (performance is about 2 to 3 times faster now with GCM).
> > >
> > > On Sun, Jun 9, 2019 at 6:57 AM Ard Biesheuvel <ard.biesheuvel@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > > >
> > > > The CIFS code uses the sync skcipher API to invoke the ecb(arc4) skcipher,
> > > > of which only a single generic C code implementation exists. This means
> > > > that going through all the trouble of using scatterlists etc buys us
> > > > very little, and we're better off just invoking the arc4 library directly.
> >
> > This patch only changes RC4 encryption, and to be clear it actually *improves*
> > the performance of the RC4 encryption, since it removes unnecessary
> > abstractions.  I'd really hope that people wouldn't care either way, though,
> > since RC4 is insecure and should not be used.
> >
> > Also it seems that fs/cifs/ supports AES-CCM but not AES-GCM?
> >
> > /* pneg_ctxt->Ciphers[0] = SMB2_ENCRYPTION_AES128_GCM;*/ /* not supported yet */
> >         pneg_ctxt->Ciphers[0] = SMB2_ENCRYPTION_AES128_CCM;
> >
> > AES-GCM is usually faster than AES-CCM, so if you want to improve performance,
> > switching from CCM to GCM would do that.
> >
> > - Eric
>
> Yes - when I tested the GCM code in cifs.ko last week (the two patches
> are currently
> in the cifs-2.6.git for-next branch and thus in linux-next and are
> attached), I was astounded
> at the improvement - encryption with GCM is now faster than signing,
> and copy is more
> than twice as fast as encryption was before with CCM (assuming a fast
> enough network so
> that the network is not the bottleneck).  We see more benefit in the write path
> (copy to server) than the read path (copy from server) but even the
> read path gets
> 80% benefit in my tests, and with the addition of multichannel support
> in the next
> few months, we should see copy from server on SMB3.1.1 mounts
> improving even more.
>

I assume this was tested on high end x86 silicon? The CBCMAC path in
CCM is strictly sequential, so on systems with deep pipelines, you
lose a lot of speed there. For arm64, I implemented a CCM driver that
does the encryption and authentication in parallel, which mitigates
most of the performance hit, but even then, you will still be running
with a underutilized pipeline (unless you are using low end silicon
which only has a 2 cycle latency for AES instructions)

> Any other ideas how to improve the encryption or signing in the read
> or write path
> in cifs.ko would be appreciated.   We still are slower than Windows, probably in
> part due to holding mutexes longer in sending the frame across the network
> (including signing or encryption) which limits parallelism somewhat.
>

It all depends on whether crypto is still the bottleneck in this case.



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