SPARC optimizations for SHA1Transform()
Passing arguments explicitly into SHA1Transform() increases the number of registers abailable to the compiler, hence leaving more local and out registers available. The missing symbol of sha1_consts[], which prevents compiling on SPARC, is added back, which speeds up the process of utilizing the relative constants. This should fix #6738. Signed-off-by: Pengcheng Xu <i@jsteward.moe>
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@ -45,7 +45,16 @@
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static void Encode(uint8_t *, const uint32_t *, size_t);
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#if defined(__amd64)
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#if defined(__sparc)
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#define SHA1_TRANSFORM(ctx, in) \
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SHA1Transform((ctx)->state[0], (ctx)->state[1], (ctx)->state[2], \
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(ctx)->state[3], (ctx)->state[4], (ctx), (in))
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static void SHA1Transform(uint32_t, uint32_t, uint32_t, uint32_t, uint32_t,
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SHA1_CTX *, const uint8_t *);
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#elif defined(__amd64)
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#define SHA1_TRANSFORM(ctx, in) sha1_block_data_order((ctx), (in), 1)
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#define SHA1_TRANSFORM_BLOCKS(ctx, in, num) sha1_block_data_order((ctx), \
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@ -260,6 +269,158 @@ typedef uint32_t sha1word;
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#define W(n) w_ ## n
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#endif /* !defined(W_ARRAY) */
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#if defined(__sparc)
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/*
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* sparc register window optimization:
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*
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* `a', `b', `c', `d', and `e' are passed into SHA1Transform
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* explicitly since it increases the number of registers available to
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* the compiler. under this scheme, these variables can be held in
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* %i0 - %i4, which leaves more local and out registers available.
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*
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* purpose: sha1 transformation -- updates the digest based on `block'
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* input: uint32_t : bytes 1 - 4 of the digest
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* uint32_t : bytes 5 - 8 of the digest
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* uint32_t : bytes 9 - 12 of the digest
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* uint32_t : bytes 12 - 16 of the digest
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* uint32_t : bytes 16 - 20 of the digest
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* SHA1_CTX * : the context to update
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* uint8_t [64]: the block to use to update the digest
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* output: void
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*/
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void
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SHA1Transform(uint32_t a, uint32_t b, uint32_t c, uint32_t d, uint32_t e,
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SHA1_CTX *ctx, const uint8_t blk[64])
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{
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/*
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* sparc optimization:
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*
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* while it is somewhat counter-intuitive, on sparc, it is
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* more efficient to place all the constants used in this
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* function in an array and load the values out of the array
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* than to manually load the constants. this is because
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* setting a register to a 32-bit value takes two ops in most
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* cases: a `sethi' and an `or', but loading a 32-bit value
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* from memory only takes one `ld' (or `lduw' on v9). while
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* this increases memory usage, the compiler can find enough
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* other things to do while waiting to keep the pipeline does
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* not stall. additionally, it is likely that many of these
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* constants are cached so that later accesses do not even go
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* out to the bus.
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*
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* this array is declared `static' to keep the compiler from
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* having to bcopy() this array onto the stack frame of
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* SHA1Transform() each time it is called -- which is
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* unacceptably expensive.
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*
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* the `const' is to ensure that callers are good citizens and
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* do not try to munge the array. since these routines are
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* going to be called from inside multithreaded kernelland,
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* this is a good safety check. -- `sha1_consts' will end up in
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* .rodata.
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*
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* unfortunately, loading from an array in this manner hurts
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* performance under Intel. So, there is a macro,
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* SHA1_CONST(), used in SHA1Transform(), that either expands to
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* a reference to this array, or to the actual constant,
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* depending on what platform this code is compiled for.
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*/
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static const uint32_t sha1_consts[] = {
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SHA1_CONST_0, SHA1_CONST_1, SHA1_CONST_2, SHA1_CONST_3
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};
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/*
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* general optimization:
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*
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* use individual integers instead of using an array. this is a
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* win, although the amount it wins by seems to vary quite a bit.
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*/
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uint32_t w_0, w_1, w_2, w_3, w_4, w_5, w_6, w_7;
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uint32_t w_8, w_9, w_10, w_11, w_12, w_13, w_14, w_15;
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/*
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* sparc optimization:
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*
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* if `block' is already aligned on a 4-byte boundary, use
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* LOAD_BIG_32() directly. otherwise, bcopy() into a
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* buffer that *is* aligned on a 4-byte boundary and then do
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* the LOAD_BIG_32() on that buffer. benchmarks have shown
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* that using the bcopy() is better than loading the bytes
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* individually and doing the endian-swap by hand.
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*
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* even though it's quite tempting to assign to do:
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*
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* blk = bcopy(ctx->buf_un.buf32, blk, sizeof (ctx->buf_un.buf32));
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*
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* and only have one set of LOAD_BIG_32()'s, the compiler
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* *does not* like that, so please resist the urge.
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*/
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if ((uintptr_t)blk & 0x3) { /* not 4-byte aligned? */
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bcopy(blk, ctx->buf_un.buf32, sizeof (ctx->buf_un.buf32));
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w_15 = LOAD_BIG_32(ctx->buf_un.buf32 + 15);
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w_14 = LOAD_BIG_32(ctx->buf_un.buf32 + 14);
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w_13 = LOAD_BIG_32(ctx->buf_un.buf32 + 13);
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w_12 = LOAD_BIG_32(ctx->buf_un.buf32 + 12);
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w_11 = LOAD_BIG_32(ctx->buf_un.buf32 + 11);
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w_10 = LOAD_BIG_32(ctx->buf_un.buf32 + 10);
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w_9 = LOAD_BIG_32(ctx->buf_un.buf32 + 9);
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w_8 = LOAD_BIG_32(ctx->buf_un.buf32 + 8);
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w_7 = LOAD_BIG_32(ctx->buf_un.buf32 + 7);
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w_6 = LOAD_BIG_32(ctx->buf_un.buf32 + 6);
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w_5 = LOAD_BIG_32(ctx->buf_un.buf32 + 5);
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w_4 = LOAD_BIG_32(ctx->buf_un.buf32 + 4);
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w_3 = LOAD_BIG_32(ctx->buf_un.buf32 + 3);
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w_2 = LOAD_BIG_32(ctx->buf_un.buf32 + 2);
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w_1 = LOAD_BIG_32(ctx->buf_un.buf32 + 1);
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w_0 = LOAD_BIG_32(ctx->buf_un.buf32 + 0);
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} else {
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/* LINTED E_BAD_PTR_CAST_ALIGN */
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w_15 = LOAD_BIG_32(blk + 60);
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/* LINTED E_BAD_PTR_CAST_ALIGN */
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w_14 = LOAD_BIG_32(blk + 56);
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/* LINTED E_BAD_PTR_CAST_ALIGN */
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w_13 = LOAD_BIG_32(blk + 52);
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/* LINTED E_BAD_PTR_CAST_ALIGN */
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w_12 = LOAD_BIG_32(blk + 48);
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/* LINTED E_BAD_PTR_CAST_ALIGN */
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w_11 = LOAD_BIG_32(blk + 44);
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/* LINTED E_BAD_PTR_CAST_ALIGN */
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w_10 = LOAD_BIG_32(blk + 40);
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/* LINTED E_BAD_PTR_CAST_ALIGN */
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w_9 = LOAD_BIG_32(blk + 36);
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/* LINTED E_BAD_PTR_CAST_ALIGN */
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w_8 = LOAD_BIG_32(blk + 32);
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/* LINTED E_BAD_PTR_CAST_ALIGN */
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w_7 = LOAD_BIG_32(blk + 28);
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/* LINTED E_BAD_PTR_CAST_ALIGN */
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w_6 = LOAD_BIG_32(blk + 24);
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/* LINTED E_BAD_PTR_CAST_ALIGN */
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w_5 = LOAD_BIG_32(blk + 20);
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/* LINTED E_BAD_PTR_CAST_ALIGN */
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w_4 = LOAD_BIG_32(blk + 16);
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/* LINTED E_BAD_PTR_CAST_ALIGN */
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w_3 = LOAD_BIG_32(blk + 12);
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/* LINTED E_BAD_PTR_CAST_ALIGN */
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w_2 = LOAD_BIG_32(blk + 8);
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/* LINTED E_BAD_PTR_CAST_ALIGN */
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w_1 = LOAD_BIG_32(blk + 4);
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/* LINTED E_BAD_PTR_CAST_ALIGN */
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w_0 = LOAD_BIG_32(blk + 0);
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}
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#else /* !defined(__sparc) */
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void /* CSTYLED */
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SHA1Transform(SHA1_CTX *ctx, const uint8_t blk[64])
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{
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@ -294,6 +455,8 @@ SHA1Transform(SHA1_CTX *ctx, const uint8_t blk[64])
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W(14) = LOAD_BIG_32((void *)(blk + 56));
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W(15) = LOAD_BIG_32((void *)(blk + 60));
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#endif /* !defined(__sparc) */
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/*
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* general optimization:
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*
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