1. 05 1月, 2018 1 次提交
  2. 13 4月, 2016 2 次提交
  3. 31 3月, 2016 1 次提交
  4. 14 9月, 2015 1 次提交
    • D
      x86/fpu: Rename XSAVE macros · d91cab78
      Dave Hansen 提交于
      There are two concepts that have some confusing naming:
       1. Extended State Component numbers (currently called
          XFEATURE_BIT_*)
       2. Extended State Component masks (currently called XSTATE_*)
      
      The numbers are (currently) from 0-9.  State component 3 is the
      bounds registers for MPX, for instance.
      
      But when we want to enable "state component 3", we go set a bit
      in XCR0.  The bit we set is 1<<3.  We can check to see if a
      state component feature is enabled by looking at its bit.
      
      The current 'xfeature_bit's are at best xfeature bit _numbers_.
      Calling them bits is at best inconsistent with ending the enum
      list with 'XFEATURES_NR_MAX'.
      
      This patch renames the enum to be 'xfeature'.  These also
      happen to be what the Intel documentation calls a "state
      component".
      
      We also want to differentiate these from the "XSTATE_*" macros.
      The "XSTATE_*" macros are a mask, and we rename them to match.
      
      These macros are reasonably widely used so this patch is a
      wee bit big, but this really is just a rename.
      
      The only non-mechanical part of this is the
      
      	s/XSTATE_EXTEND_MASK/XFEATURE_MASK_EXTEND/
      
      We need a better name for it, but that's another patch.
      Signed-off-by: NDave Hansen <dave.hansen@linux.intel.com>
      Cc: Andy Lutomirski <luto@amacapital.net>
      Cc: Borislav Petkov <bp@alien8.de>
      Cc: Brian Gerst <brgerst@gmail.com>
      Cc: Denys Vlasenko <dvlasenk@redhat.com>
      Cc: Fenghua Yu <fenghua.yu@intel.com>
      Cc: H. Peter Anvin <hpa@zytor.com>
      Cc: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
      Cc: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org>
      Cc: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de>
      Cc: Tim Chen <tim.c.chen@linux.intel.com>
      Cc: dave@sr71.net
      Cc: linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org
      Link: http://lkml.kernel.org/r/20150902233126.38653250@viggo.jf.intel.com
      [ Ported to v4.3-rc1. ]
      Signed-off-by: NIngo Molnar <mingo@kernel.org>
      d91cab78
  5. 17 7月, 2015 3 次提交
    • M
      crypto: poly1305 - Add a four block AVX2 variant for x86_64 · b1ccc8f4
      Martin Willi 提交于
      Extends the x86_64 Poly1305 authenticator by a function processing four
      consecutive Poly1305 blocks in parallel using AVX2 instructions.
      
      For large messages, throughput increases by ~15-45% compared to two
      block SSE2:
      
      testing speed of poly1305 (poly1305-simd)
      test  0 (   96 byte blocks,   16 bytes per update,   6 updates): 3809514 opers/sec,  365713411 bytes/sec
      test  1 (   96 byte blocks,   32 bytes per update,   3 updates): 5973423 opers/sec,  573448627 bytes/sec
      test  2 (   96 byte blocks,   96 bytes per update,   1 updates): 9446779 opers/sec,  906890803 bytes/sec
      test  3 (  288 byte blocks,   16 bytes per update,  18 updates): 1364814 opers/sec,  393066691 bytes/sec
      test  4 (  288 byte blocks,   32 bytes per update,   9 updates): 2045780 opers/sec,  589184697 bytes/sec
      test  5 (  288 byte blocks,  288 bytes per update,   1 updates): 3711946 opers/sec, 1069040592 bytes/sec
      test  6 ( 1056 byte blocks,   32 bytes per update,  33 updates):  573686 opers/sec,  605812732 bytes/sec
      test  7 ( 1056 byte blocks, 1056 bytes per update,   1 updates): 1647802 opers/sec, 1740079440 bytes/sec
      test  8 ( 2080 byte blocks,   32 bytes per update,  65 updates):  292970 opers/sec,  609378224 bytes/sec
      test  9 ( 2080 byte blocks, 2080 bytes per update,   1 updates):  943229 opers/sec, 1961916528 bytes/sec
      test 10 ( 4128 byte blocks, 4128 bytes per update,   1 updates):  494623 opers/sec, 2041804569 bytes/sec
      test 11 ( 8224 byte blocks, 8224 bytes per update,   1 updates):  254045 opers/sec, 2089271014 bytes/sec
      
      testing speed of poly1305 (poly1305-simd)
      test  0 (   96 byte blocks,   16 bytes per update,   6 updates): 3826224 opers/sec,  367317552 bytes/sec
      test  1 (   96 byte blocks,   32 bytes per update,   3 updates): 5948638 opers/sec,  571069267 bytes/sec
      test  2 (   96 byte blocks,   96 bytes per update,   1 updates): 9439110 opers/sec,  906154627 bytes/sec
      test  3 (  288 byte blocks,   16 bytes per update,  18 updates): 1367756 opers/sec,  393913872 bytes/sec
      test  4 (  288 byte blocks,   32 bytes per update,   9 updates): 2056881 opers/sec,  592381958 bytes/sec
      test  5 (  288 byte blocks,  288 bytes per update,   1 updates): 3711153 opers/sec, 1068812179 bytes/sec
      test  6 ( 1056 byte blocks,   32 bytes per update,  33 updates):  574940 opers/sec,  607136745 bytes/sec
      test  7 ( 1056 byte blocks, 1056 bytes per update,   1 updates): 1948830 opers/sec, 2057964585 bytes/sec
      test  8 ( 2080 byte blocks,   32 bytes per update,  65 updates):  293308 opers/sec,  610082096 bytes/sec
      test  9 ( 2080 byte blocks, 2080 bytes per update,   1 updates): 1235224 opers/sec, 2569267792 bytes/sec
      test 10 ( 4128 byte blocks, 4128 bytes per update,   1 updates):  684405 opers/sec, 2825226316 bytes/sec
      test 11 ( 8224 byte blocks, 8224 bytes per update,   1 updates):  367101 opers/sec, 3019039446 bytes/sec
      
      Benchmark results from a Core i5-4670T.
      Signed-off-by: NMartin Willi <martin@strongswan.org>
      Signed-off-by: NHerbert Xu <herbert@gondor.apana.org.au>
      b1ccc8f4
    • M
      crypto: poly1305 - Add a two block SSE2 variant for x86_64 · da35b22d
      Martin Willi 提交于
      Extends the x86_64 SSE2 Poly1305 authenticator by a function processing two
      consecutive Poly1305 blocks in parallel using a derived key r^2. Loop
      unrolling can be more effectively mapped to SSE instructions, further
      increasing throughput.
      
      For large messages, throughput increases by ~45-65% compared to single
      block SSE2:
      
      testing speed of poly1305 (poly1305-simd)
      test  0 (   96 byte blocks,   16 bytes per update,   6 updates): 3790063 opers/sec,  363846076 bytes/sec
      test  1 (   96 byte blocks,   32 bytes per update,   3 updates): 5913378 opers/sec,  567684355 bytes/sec
      test  2 (   96 byte blocks,   96 bytes per update,   1 updates): 9352574 opers/sec,  897847104 bytes/sec
      test  3 (  288 byte blocks,   16 bytes per update,  18 updates): 1362145 opers/sec,  392297990 bytes/sec
      test  4 (  288 byte blocks,   32 bytes per update,   9 updates): 2007075 opers/sec,  578037628 bytes/sec
      test  5 (  288 byte blocks,  288 bytes per update,   1 updates): 3709811 opers/sec, 1068425798 bytes/sec
      test  6 ( 1056 byte blocks,   32 bytes per update,  33 updates):  566272 opers/sec,  597984182 bytes/sec
      test  7 ( 1056 byte blocks, 1056 bytes per update,   1 updates): 1111657 opers/sec, 1173910108 bytes/sec
      test  8 ( 2080 byte blocks,   32 bytes per update,  65 updates):  288857 opers/sec,  600823808 bytes/sec
      test  9 ( 2080 byte blocks, 2080 bytes per update,   1 updates):  590746 opers/sec, 1228751888 bytes/sec
      test 10 ( 4128 byte blocks, 4128 bytes per update,   1 updates):  301825 opers/sec, 1245936902 bytes/sec
      test 11 ( 8224 byte blocks, 8224 bytes per update,   1 updates):  153075 opers/sec, 1258896201 bytes/sec
      
      testing speed of poly1305 (poly1305-simd)
      test  0 (   96 byte blocks,   16 bytes per update,   6 updates): 3809514 opers/sec,  365713411 bytes/sec
      test  1 (   96 byte blocks,   32 bytes per update,   3 updates): 5973423 opers/sec,  573448627 bytes/sec
      test  2 (   96 byte blocks,   96 bytes per update,   1 updates): 9446779 opers/sec,  906890803 bytes/sec
      test  3 (  288 byte blocks,   16 bytes per update,  18 updates): 1364814 opers/sec,  393066691 bytes/sec
      test  4 (  288 byte blocks,   32 bytes per update,   9 updates): 2045780 opers/sec,  589184697 bytes/sec
      test  5 (  288 byte blocks,  288 bytes per update,   1 updates): 3711946 opers/sec, 1069040592 bytes/sec
      test  6 ( 1056 byte blocks,   32 bytes per update,  33 updates):  573686 opers/sec,  605812732 bytes/sec
      test  7 ( 1056 byte blocks, 1056 bytes per update,   1 updates): 1647802 opers/sec, 1740079440 bytes/sec
      test  8 ( 2080 byte blocks,   32 bytes per update,  65 updates):  292970 opers/sec,  609378224 bytes/sec
      test  9 ( 2080 byte blocks, 2080 bytes per update,   1 updates):  943229 opers/sec, 1961916528 bytes/sec
      test 10 ( 4128 byte blocks, 4128 bytes per update,   1 updates):  494623 opers/sec, 2041804569 bytes/sec
      test 11 ( 8224 byte blocks, 8224 bytes per update,   1 updates):  254045 opers/sec, 2089271014 bytes/sec
      
      Benchmark results from a Core i5-4670T.
      Signed-off-by: NMartin Willi <martin@strongswan.org>
      Signed-off-by: NHerbert Xu <herbert@gondor.apana.org.au>
      da35b22d
    • M
      crypto: poly1305 - Add a SSE2 SIMD variant for x86_64 · c70f4abe
      Martin Willi 提交于
      Implements an x86_64 assembler driver for the Poly1305 authenticator. This
      single block variant holds the 130-bit integer in 5 32-bit words, but uses
      SSE to do two multiplications/additions in parallel.
      
      When calling updates with small blocks, the overhead for kernel_fpu_begin/
      kernel_fpu_end() negates the perfmance gain. We therefore use the
      poly1305-generic fallback for small updates.
      
      For large messages, throughput increases by ~5-10% compared to
      poly1305-generic:
      
      testing speed of poly1305 (poly1305-generic)
      test  0 (   96 byte blocks,   16 bytes per update,   6 updates): 4080026 opers/sec,  391682496 bytes/sec
      test  1 (   96 byte blocks,   32 bytes per update,   3 updates): 6221094 opers/sec,  597225024 bytes/sec
      test  2 (   96 byte blocks,   96 bytes per update,   1 updates): 9609750 opers/sec,  922536057 bytes/sec
      test  3 (  288 byte blocks,   16 bytes per update,  18 updates): 1459379 opers/sec,  420301267 bytes/sec
      test  4 (  288 byte blocks,   32 bytes per update,   9 updates): 2115179 opers/sec,  609171609 bytes/sec
      test  5 (  288 byte blocks,  288 bytes per update,   1 updates): 3729874 opers/sec, 1074203856 bytes/sec
      test  6 ( 1056 byte blocks,   32 bytes per update,  33 updates):  593000 opers/sec,  626208000 bytes/sec
      test  7 ( 1056 byte blocks, 1056 bytes per update,   1 updates): 1081536 opers/sec, 1142102332 bytes/sec
      test  8 ( 2080 byte blocks,   32 bytes per update,  65 updates):  302077 opers/sec,  628320576 bytes/sec
      test  9 ( 2080 byte blocks, 2080 bytes per update,   1 updates):  554384 opers/sec, 1153120176 bytes/sec
      test 10 ( 4128 byte blocks, 4128 bytes per update,   1 updates):  278715 opers/sec, 1150536345 bytes/sec
      test 11 ( 8224 byte blocks, 8224 bytes per update,   1 updates):  140202 opers/sec, 1153022070 bytes/sec
      
      testing speed of poly1305 (poly1305-simd)
      test  0 (   96 byte blocks,   16 bytes per update,   6 updates): 3790063 opers/sec,  363846076 bytes/sec
      test  1 (   96 byte blocks,   32 bytes per update,   3 updates): 5913378 opers/sec,  567684355 bytes/sec
      test  2 (   96 byte blocks,   96 bytes per update,   1 updates): 9352574 opers/sec,  897847104 bytes/sec
      test  3 (  288 byte blocks,   16 bytes per update,  18 updates): 1362145 opers/sec,  392297990 bytes/sec
      test  4 (  288 byte blocks,   32 bytes per update,   9 updates): 2007075 opers/sec,  578037628 bytes/sec
      test  5 (  288 byte blocks,  288 bytes per update,   1 updates): 3709811 opers/sec, 1068425798 bytes/sec
      test  6 ( 1056 byte blocks,   32 bytes per update,  33 updates):  566272 opers/sec,  597984182 bytes/sec
      test  7 ( 1056 byte blocks, 1056 bytes per update,   1 updates): 1111657 opers/sec, 1173910108 bytes/sec
      test  8 ( 2080 byte blocks,   32 bytes per update,  65 updates):  288857 opers/sec,  600823808 bytes/sec
      test  9 ( 2080 byte blocks, 2080 bytes per update,   1 updates):  590746 opers/sec, 1228751888 bytes/sec
      test 10 ( 4128 byte blocks, 4128 bytes per update,   1 updates):  301825 opers/sec, 1245936902 bytes/sec
      test 11 ( 8224 byte blocks, 8224 bytes per update,   1 updates):  153075 opers/sec, 1258896201 bytes/sec
      
      Benchmark results from a Core i5-4670T.
      Signed-off-by: NMartin Willi <martin@strongswan.org>
      Signed-off-by: NHerbert Xu <herbert@gondor.apana.org.au>
      c70f4abe