"Darrick J. Wong" <djwong@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote on 2011/09/30 18:12:23: > > [putting mailing lists on cc] > > On Fri, Sep 30, 2011 at 08:01:36AM +0200, Joakim Tjernlund wrote: > > > > (Just happen to see this patch in the archives) > > > > - This is basically an copy of Bobs crc32 work and duplicates code, this > > code needs to move into /lib/crc32.c and use the existing framework. > > Which framework are you talking about? lib/crc32.c appears to be a simple > module that exports a utility function. Do you mean that you want to merge the > crc32{,c}defs.h and gen_crc32{,c}table.c code? Do you want a build script that > starts with only a crc${ALG}_defs.h file and stamps out gencrc${ALG}_table.c > and crc${ALG}.c boilerplate code and then builds it? I meant adding a crc32c_le in crc32.c and extend gen_table to generate the crc32c table. > > I really don't know; from my perspective there was a slow implementation in > crypto/crc32c.c and I wanted to speed it up. crc32c seems to be in crypto/ and > not lib/ so that the implementation can be replaced with a hardware accelerated > version at runtime (crc32c-intel). It was a mistake to place it there IMHO. > > For crc32 which has no such hw replacement (as far as I know), moving it into > crypto/ would incur the overhead of going through the cryptoapi for not much > benefit. On the other hand it wouldn't be hard to put the crc32 code into > crypto/. No, CRC is not a crypto. It is used by other subsystems like file systems that has nothing to do with crypto. Compare with the internet checksum, I think you will have a hard time moving it to crypto. > > > > - Slice by 8 is just half the speed on my ppc32 compared to slice by 4 so > > it can't be enabled for all archs. Best to start with all 64 bit archs > > <shrug> I suppose I could make CRC32C_BITS configurable. What is the hardware > profile of your ppc32 processor? How much L1D/L2 cache? slice-by-8 does have > a big cache footprint. On the other hand it's faster than the slice-by-4 > (crc32) and Sarwate (crc32c) code in the kernel, even on old slow 32-bit x86 > processors (PII, PIII, P4). It is a low end embedded 333 MHz CPU with only L1 cache. How much faster is slice by 8 than slice by 4 on these old x86 machines? Bobs last version tested for 64/32 bits arch and selected slice by 8/slice by 4 based on that. > > > - Last time I tested Bobs slice by 8 on ppc32 it didn't work. > > ... is crc32c broken *now*? It seems fine on x86/amd64/ppc64. Don't know, I haven't tested it. Don't have much time ATM and I don't want to test something I don't agree with. Jocke -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-crypto" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html