On Wed, Aug 25, 2021 at 1:08 AM Herbert Xu <herbert@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Tue, Aug 24, 2021 at 04:34:58PM -0700, Eric Dumazet wrote: > > > > On 8/24/21 2:34 PM, Leonard Crestez wrote: > > > The crypto_shash API is used in order to compute packet signatures. The > > > API comes with several unfortunate limitations: > > > > > > 1) Allocating a crypto_shash can sleep and must be done in user context. > > > 2) Packet signatures must be computed in softirq context > > > 3) Packet signatures use dynamic "traffic keys" which require exclusive > > > access to crypto_shash for crypto_setkey. > > > > > > The solution is to allocate one crypto_shash for each possible cpu for > > > each algorithm at setsockopt time. The per-cpu tfm is then borrowed from > > > softirq context, signatures are computed and the tfm is returned. > > > > > > > I could not see the per-cpu stuff that you mention in the changelog. > > Perhaps it's time we moved the key information from the tfm into > the request structure for hashes? Or at least provide a way for > the key to be in the request structure in addition to the tfm as > the tfm model still works for IPsec. Ard/Eric, what do you think > about that? What is the typical size of a ' tfm' and associated data ? per-cpu tfm might still make sense, if we had proper NUMA affinities. AFAIK, currently we can not provide a numa node to crypto allocations. So using construct like this ends up allocating all data on one single NUMA node for_each_possible_cpu(cpu) { tfm = crypto_alloc_shash(algo->name, 0, 0); if (IS_ERR(tfm)) return PTR_ERR(tfm); p_tfm = per_cpu_ptr(algo->tfms, cpu); *p_tfm = tfm; }