The double compilation of the kernel sources in libmd and libcrypt is
baffling, but add yet another define hack to prevent duplicate symbols.
Add documentation and SHA2-224 test cases to libmd.
Integrate with the md5(1) command, document, and add more test cases;
self-tests pass.
This implements SHA-512/256, which generates a 256 bit hash by
calculating the SHA-512 then truncating the result. A different initial
value is used, making the result different from the first 256 bits of
the SHA-512 of the same input. SHA-512 is ~50% faster than SHA-256 on
64bit platforms, so the result is a faster 256 bit hash.
The main goal of this implementation is to enable support for this
faster hashing algorithm in ZFS. The feature was introduced into ZFS
in r289422, but is disconnected because SHA-512/256 support was missing.
A further commit will enable it in ZFS.
This is the follow on to r292782
Reviewed by: cem
Sponsored by: ScaleEngine Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6061
cperciva's libmd implementation is 5-30% faster
The same was done for SHA256 previously in r263218
cperciva's implementation was lacking SHA-384 which I implemented, validated against OpenSSL and the NIST documentation
Extend sbin/md5 to create sha384(1)
Chase dependancies on sys/crypto/sha2/sha2.{c,h} and replace them with sha512{c.c,.h}
Reviewed by: cperciva, des, delphij
Approved by: secteam, bapt (mentor)
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: ScaleEngine Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3929
Add a prefix to all symbols in libmd to avoid incompatibilites
with same-named, but not binary compatible, symbols from libcrypto.
Also introduce Weak aliases to avoid the need to rebuild dependent
binaries and a major version bump.
PR: 199119
Differential Revision: D2216
Reviewed by: roberto, delphij
MFC after: 2 weeks