2011-09-29 00:16:27

by djwong

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: [PATCH v3] crc32c: Implement CRC32c with slicing-by-8 algorithm

The existing CRC32c implementation uses Sarwate's algorithm to calculate the
code one byte at a time. Using slicing-by-8, we can process buffers 8 bytes at
a time, for a substantial increase in performance.

v2: Use the crypto testmgr api for self-test.
v3: Get rid of the -be version, which had no users.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <[email protected]>
---
crypto/Makefile | 11 ++
crypto/crc32c.c | 305 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++------------
crypto/crc32c_defs.h | 26 ++++
crypto/gen_crc32ctable.c | 79 ++++++++++++
4 files changed, 340 insertions(+), 81 deletions(-)
create mode 100644 crypto/crc32c_defs.h
create mode 100644 crypto/gen_crc32ctable.c


diff --git a/crypto/Makefile b/crypto/Makefile
index ce5a813..00811ef 100644
--- a/crypto/Makefile
+++ b/crypto/Makefile
@@ -94,3 +94,14 @@ obj-$(CONFIG_CRYPTO_USER_API_SKCIPHER) += algif_skcipher.o
#
obj-$(CONFIG_XOR_BLOCKS) += xor.o
obj-$(CONFIG_ASYNC_CORE) += async_tx/
+
+hostprogs-y := gen_crc32ctable
+clean-files := crc32ctable.h
+
+$(obj)/crc32c.o: $(obj)/crc32c_table.h
+
+quiet_cmd_crc32c = GEN $@
+ cmd_crc32c = $< > $@
+
+$(obj)/crc32c_table.h: $(obj)/gen_crc32ctable
+ $(call cmd,crc32c)
diff --git a/crypto/crc32c.c b/crypto/crc32c.c
index 3f9ad28..d510ec8 100644
--- a/crypto/crc32c.c
+++ b/crypto/crc32c.c
@@ -33,6 +33,35 @@
* Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option)
* any later version.
*
+ * The current crc32c implementation is adapted from Bob Pearson's slice-by-8
+ * crc32 kernel patch from mid-2011.
+ *
+ * August 26, 2011 Darrick J. Wong <djwong at us.ibm.com>
+ * Reuse Bob Pearson's slice-by-8 implementation for e2fsprogs.
+ *
+ * July 20, 2011 Bob Pearson <rpearson at systemfabricworks.com>
+ * added slice by 8 algorithm to the existing conventional and
+ * slice by 4 algorithms.
+ *
+ * Oct 15, 2000 Matt Domsch <[email protected]>
+ * Nicer crc32 functions/docs submitted by [email protected]. Thanks!
+ * Code was from the public domain, copyright abandoned. Code was
+ * subsequently included in the kernel, thus was re-licensed under the
+ * GNU GPL v2.
+ *
+ * Oct 12, 2000 Matt Domsch <[email protected]>
+ * Same crc32 function was used in 5 other places in the kernel.
+ * I made one version, and deleted the others.
+ * There are various incantations of crc32(). Some use a seed of 0 or ~0.
+ * Some xor at the end with ~0. The generic crc32() function takes
+ * seed as an argument, and doesn't xor at the end. Then individual
+ * users can do whatever they need.
+ * drivers/net/smc9194.c uses seed ~0, doesn't xor with ~0.
+ * fs/jffs2 uses seed 0, doesn't xor with ~0.
+ * fs/partitions/efi.c uses seed ~0, xor's with ~0.
+ *
+ * This source code is licensed under the GNU General Public License,
+ * Version 2. See the file COPYING for more details.
*/

#include <crypto/internal/hash.h>
@@ -40,6 +69,7 @@
#include <linux/module.h>
#include <linux/string.h>
#include <linux/kernel.h>
+#include "crc32c_defs.h"

#define CHKSUM_BLOCK_SIZE 1
#define CHKSUM_DIGEST_SIZE 4
@@ -52,92 +82,205 @@ struct chksum_desc_ctx {
u32 crc;
};

-/*
- * This is the CRC-32C table
- * Generated with:
- * width = 32 bits
- * poly = 0x1EDC6F41
- * reflect input bytes = true
- * reflect output bytes = true
- */
+#if CRC32C_BITS > 8
+# define tole(x) (__force u32) __constant_cpu_to_le32(x)
+#else
+# define tole(x) (x)
+#endif

-static const u32 crc32c_table[256] = {
- 0x00000000L, 0xF26B8303L, 0xE13B70F7L, 0x1350F3F4L,
- 0xC79A971FL, 0x35F1141CL, 0x26A1E7E8L, 0xD4CA64EBL,
- 0x8AD958CFL, 0x78B2DBCCL, 0x6BE22838L, 0x9989AB3BL,
- 0x4D43CFD0L, 0xBF284CD3L, 0xAC78BF27L, 0x5E133C24L,
- 0x105EC76FL, 0xE235446CL, 0xF165B798L, 0x030E349BL,
- 0xD7C45070L, 0x25AFD373L, 0x36FF2087L, 0xC494A384L,
- 0x9A879FA0L, 0x68EC1CA3L, 0x7BBCEF57L, 0x89D76C54L,
- 0x5D1D08BFL, 0xAF768BBCL, 0xBC267848L, 0x4E4DFB4BL,
- 0x20BD8EDEL, 0xD2D60DDDL, 0xC186FE29L, 0x33ED7D2AL,
- 0xE72719C1L, 0x154C9AC2L, 0x061C6936L, 0xF477EA35L,
- 0xAA64D611L, 0x580F5512L, 0x4B5FA6E6L, 0xB93425E5L,
- 0x6DFE410EL, 0x9F95C20DL, 0x8CC531F9L, 0x7EAEB2FAL,
- 0x30E349B1L, 0xC288CAB2L, 0xD1D83946L, 0x23B3BA45L,
- 0xF779DEAEL, 0x05125DADL, 0x1642AE59L, 0xE4292D5AL,
- 0xBA3A117EL, 0x4851927DL, 0x5B016189L, 0xA96AE28AL,
- 0x7DA08661L, 0x8FCB0562L, 0x9C9BF696L, 0x6EF07595L,
- 0x417B1DBCL, 0xB3109EBFL, 0xA0406D4BL, 0x522BEE48L,
- 0x86E18AA3L, 0x748A09A0L, 0x67DAFA54L, 0x95B17957L,
- 0xCBA24573L, 0x39C9C670L, 0x2A993584L, 0xD8F2B687L,
- 0x0C38D26CL, 0xFE53516FL, 0xED03A29BL, 0x1F682198L,
- 0x5125DAD3L, 0xA34E59D0L, 0xB01EAA24L, 0x42752927L,
- 0x96BF4DCCL, 0x64D4CECFL, 0x77843D3BL, 0x85EFBE38L,
- 0xDBFC821CL, 0x2997011FL, 0x3AC7F2EBL, 0xC8AC71E8L,
- 0x1C661503L, 0xEE0D9600L, 0xFD5D65F4L, 0x0F36E6F7L,
- 0x61C69362L, 0x93AD1061L, 0x80FDE395L, 0x72966096L,
- 0xA65C047DL, 0x5437877EL, 0x4767748AL, 0xB50CF789L,
- 0xEB1FCBADL, 0x197448AEL, 0x0A24BB5AL, 0xF84F3859L,
- 0x2C855CB2L, 0xDEEEDFB1L, 0xCDBE2C45L, 0x3FD5AF46L,
- 0x7198540DL, 0x83F3D70EL, 0x90A324FAL, 0x62C8A7F9L,
- 0xB602C312L, 0x44694011L, 0x5739B3E5L, 0xA55230E6L,
- 0xFB410CC2L, 0x092A8FC1L, 0x1A7A7C35L, 0xE811FF36L,
- 0x3CDB9BDDL, 0xCEB018DEL, 0xDDE0EB2AL, 0x2F8B6829L,
- 0x82F63B78L, 0x709DB87BL, 0x63CD4B8FL, 0x91A6C88CL,
- 0x456CAC67L, 0xB7072F64L, 0xA457DC90L, 0x563C5F93L,
- 0x082F63B7L, 0xFA44E0B4L, 0xE9141340L, 0x1B7F9043L,
- 0xCFB5F4A8L, 0x3DDE77ABL, 0x2E8E845FL, 0xDCE5075CL,
- 0x92A8FC17L, 0x60C37F14L, 0x73938CE0L, 0x81F80FE3L,
- 0x55326B08L, 0xA759E80BL, 0xB4091BFFL, 0x466298FCL,
- 0x1871A4D8L, 0xEA1A27DBL, 0xF94AD42FL, 0x0B21572CL,
- 0xDFEB33C7L, 0x2D80B0C4L, 0x3ED04330L, 0xCCBBC033L,
- 0xA24BB5A6L, 0x502036A5L, 0x4370C551L, 0xB11B4652L,
- 0x65D122B9L, 0x97BAA1BAL, 0x84EA524EL, 0x7681D14DL,
- 0x2892ED69L, 0xDAF96E6AL, 0xC9A99D9EL, 0x3BC21E9DL,
- 0xEF087A76L, 0x1D63F975L, 0x0E330A81L, 0xFC588982L,
- 0xB21572C9L, 0x407EF1CAL, 0x532E023EL, 0xA145813DL,
- 0x758FE5D6L, 0x87E466D5L, 0x94B49521L, 0x66DF1622L,
- 0x38CC2A06L, 0xCAA7A905L, 0xD9F75AF1L, 0x2B9CD9F2L,
- 0xFF56BD19L, 0x0D3D3E1AL, 0x1E6DCDEEL, 0xEC064EEDL,
- 0xC38D26C4L, 0x31E6A5C7L, 0x22B65633L, 0xD0DDD530L,
- 0x0417B1DBL, 0xF67C32D8L, 0xE52CC12CL, 0x1747422FL,
- 0x49547E0BL, 0xBB3FFD08L, 0xA86F0EFCL, 0x5A048DFFL,
- 0x8ECEE914L, 0x7CA56A17L, 0x6FF599E3L, 0x9D9E1AE0L,
- 0xD3D3E1ABL, 0x21B862A8L, 0x32E8915CL, 0xC083125FL,
- 0x144976B4L, 0xE622F5B7L, 0xF5720643L, 0x07198540L,
- 0x590AB964L, 0xAB613A67L, 0xB831C993L, 0x4A5A4A90L,
- 0x9E902E7BL, 0x6CFBAD78L, 0x7FAB5E8CL, 0x8DC0DD8FL,
- 0xE330A81AL, 0x115B2B19L, 0x020BD8EDL, 0xF0605BEEL,
- 0x24AA3F05L, 0xD6C1BC06L, 0xC5914FF2L, 0x37FACCF1L,
- 0x69E9F0D5L, 0x9B8273D6L, 0x88D28022L, 0x7AB90321L,
- 0xAE7367CAL, 0x5C18E4C9L, 0x4F48173DL, 0xBD23943EL,
- 0xF36E6F75L, 0x0105EC76L, 0x12551F82L, 0xE03E9C81L,
- 0x34F4F86AL, 0xC69F7B69L, 0xD5CF889DL, 0x27A40B9EL,
- 0x79B737BAL, 0x8BDCB4B9L, 0x988C474DL, 0x6AE7C44EL,
- 0xBE2DA0A5L, 0x4C4623A6L, 0x5F16D052L, 0xAD7D5351L
-};
+#include "crc32c_table.h"

-/*
- * Steps through buffer one byte at at time, calculates reflected
- * crc using table.
- */
+#if CRC32C_BITS == 32
+/* slice by 4 algorithm */
+static u32 crc32c_body(u32 crc, u8 const *buf, size_t len)
+{
+ const u8 *p8;
+ const u32 *p32;
+ size_t init_bytes;
+ size_t words;
+ size_t end_bytes;
+ size_t i;
+ u32 q;
+ u8 i0, i1, i2, i3;
+
+ crc = (__force u32) __cpu_to_le32(crc);
+
+ /* unroll loop into 'init_bytes' odd bytes followed by
+ * 'words' aligned 4 byte words followed by
+ * 'end_bytes' odd bytes at the end */
+ p8 = buf;
+ p32 = (u32 *)PTR_ALIGN(p8, 4);
+ init_bytes = min((uintptr_t)p32 - (uintptr_t)p8, len);
+ words = (len - init_bytes) >> 2;
+ end_bytes = (len - init_bytes) & 3;
+
+ for (i = 0; i < init_bytes; i++) {
+#ifdef __LITTLE_ENDIAN
+ i0 = *p8++ ^ crc;
+ crc = t0_le[i0] ^ (crc >> 8);
+#else
+ i0 = *p8++ ^ (crc >> 24);
+ crc = t0_le[i0] ^ (crc << 8);
+#endif
+ }
+
+ /* using pre-increment below slightly faster */
+ p32--;
+
+ for (i = 0; i < words; i++) {
+#ifdef __LITTLE_ENDIAN
+ q = *++p32 ^ crc;
+ i3 = q;
+ i2 = q >> 8;
+ i1 = q >> 16;
+ i0 = q >> 24;
+ crc = t3_le[i3] ^ t2_le[i2] ^ t1_le[i1] ^ t0_le[i0];
+#else
+ q = *++p32 ^ crc;
+ i3 = q >> 24;
+ i2 = q >> 16;
+ i1 = q >> 8;
+ i0 = q;
+ crc = t3_le[i3] ^ t2_le[i2] ^ t1_le[i1] ^ t0_le[i0];
+#endif
+ }
+
+ p8 = (u8 *)(++p32);
+
+ for (i = 0; i < end_bytes; i++) {
+#ifdef __LITTLE_ENDIAN
+ i0 = *p8++ ^ crc;
+ crc = t0_le[i0] ^ (crc >> 8);
+#else
+ i0 = *p8++ ^ (crc >> 24);
+ crc = t0_le[i0] ^ (crc << 8);
+#endif
+ }

-static u32 crc32c(u32 crc, const u8 *data, unsigned int length)
+ return __le32_to_cpu((__force __le32)crc);
+}
+#endif
+
+#if CRC32C_BITS == 64
+/* slice by 8 algorithm */
+static u32 crc32c_body(u32 crc, u8 const *buf, size_t len)
{
- while (length--)
- crc = crc32c_table[(crc ^ *data++) & 0xFFL] ^ (crc >> 8);
+ const u8 *p8;
+ const u32 *p32;
+ size_t init_bytes;
+ size_t words;
+ size_t end_bytes;
+ size_t i;
+ u32 q;
+ u8 i0, i1, i2, i3;
+
+ crc = (__force u32) __cpu_to_le32(crc);
+
+ p8 = buf;
+ p32 = (u32 *)PTR_ALIGN(p8, 8);
+ i = (void *)p32 - (void *)p8;
+ init_bytes = min(i, len);
+ words = (len - init_bytes) >> 3;
+ end_bytes = (len - init_bytes) & 7;
+
+ for (i = 0; i < init_bytes; i++) {
+#ifdef __LITTLE_ENDIAN
+ i0 = *p8++ ^ crc;
+ crc = t0_le[i0] ^ (crc >> 8);
+#else
+ i0 = *p8++ ^ (crc >> 24);
+ crc = t0_le[i0] ^ (crc << 8);
+#endif
+ }
+
+ p32--;
+
+ for (i = 0; i < words; i++) {
+#ifdef __LITTLE_ENDIAN
+ q = *++p32 ^ crc;
+ i3 = q;
+ i2 = q >> 8;
+ i1 = q >> 16;
+ i0 = q >> 24;
+ crc = t7_le[i3] ^ t6_le[i2] ^ t5_le[i1] ^ t4_le[i0];
+
+ q = *++p32;
+ i3 = q;
+ i2 = q >> 8;
+ i1 = q >> 16;
+ i0 = q >> 24;
+ crc ^= t3_le[i3] ^ t2_le[i2] ^ t1_le[i1] ^ t0_le[i0];
+#else
+ q = *++p32 ^ crc;
+ i3 = q >> 24;
+ i2 = q >> 16;
+ i1 = q >> 8;
+ i0 = q;
+ crc = t7_le[i3] ^ t6_le[i2] ^ t5_le[i1] ^ t4_le[i0];
+
+ q = *++p32;
+ i3 = q >> 24;
+ i2 = q >> 16;
+ i1 = q >> 8;
+ i0 = q;
+ crc ^= t3_le[i3] ^ t2_le[i2] ^ t1_le[i1] ^ t0_le[i0];
+#endif
+ }

+ p8 = (u8 *)(++p32);
+
+ for (i = 0; i < end_bytes; i++) {
+#ifdef __LITTLE_ENDIAN
+ i0 = *p8++ ^ crc;
+ crc = t0_le[i0] ^ (crc >> 8);
+#else
+ i0 = *p8++ ^ (crc >> 24);
+ crc = t0_le[i0] ^ (crc << 8);
+#endif
+ }
+
+ return __le32_to_cpu(crc);
+}
+#endif
+
+/**
+ * crc32c() - Calculate bitwise little-endian CRC32c.
+ * @crc: seed value for computation. ~0 for ext4, sometimes 0 for
+ * other uses, or the previous crc32c value if computing incrementally.
+ * @p: pointer to buffer over which CRC is run
+ * @len: length of buffer @p
+ */
+static u32 crc32c(u32 crc, unsigned char const *p, size_t len)
+{
+#if CRC32C_BITS == 1
+ int i;
+ while (len--) {
+ crc ^= *p++;
+ for (i = 0; i < 8; i++)
+ crc = (crc >> 1) ^ ((crc & 1) ? CRC32C_POLY_LE : 0);
+ }
+# elif CRC32C_BITS == 2
+ while (len--) {
+ crc ^= *p++;
+ crc = (crc >> 2) ^ t0_le[crc & 0x03];
+ crc = (crc >> 2) ^ t0_le[crc & 0x03];
+ crc = (crc >> 2) ^ t0_le[crc & 0x03];
+ crc = (crc >> 2) ^ t0_le[crc & 0x03];
+ }
+# elif CRC32C_BITS == 4
+ while (len--) {
+ crc ^= *p++;
+ crc = (crc >> 4) ^ t0_le[crc & 0x0f];
+ crc = (crc >> 4) ^ t0_le[crc & 0x0f];
+ }
+# elif CRC32C_BITS == 8
+ while (len--) {
+ crc ^= *p++;
+ crc = (crc >> 8) ^ t0_le[crc & 0xff];
+ }
+# else
+ crc = crc32c_body(crc, p, len);
+# endif
return crc;
}

diff --git a/crypto/crc32c_defs.h b/crypto/crc32c_defs.h
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..906ee17
--- /dev/null
+++ b/crypto/crc32c_defs.h
@@ -0,0 +1,26 @@
+#ifndef CRC32C_DEFS_H_
+#define CRC32C_DEFS_H_
+
+/*
+ * This is the CRC32c polynomial, as outlined by Castagnoli.
+ * x^32+x^28+x^27+x^26+x^25+x^23+x^22+x^20+x^19+x^18+x^14+x^13+x^11+x^10+x^9+
+ * x^8+x^6+x^0
+ */
+#define CRC32C_POLY_LE 0x82F63B78
+
+/* How many bits at a time to use. Valid values are 1, 2, 4, 8, 32 and 64. */
+/* For less performance-sensitive, use 4 */
+#ifndef CRC32C_BITS
+# define CRC32C_BITS 64
+#endif
+
+/*
+ * Little-endian CRC computation. Used with serial bit streams sent
+ * lsbit-first. Be sure to use cpu_to_le32() to append the computed CRC.
+ */
+#if CRC32C_BITS > 64 || CRC32C_BITS < 1 || CRC32C_BITS == 16 || \
+ CRC32C_BITS & CRC32C_BITS-1
+# error "CRC32C_BITS must be one of {1, 2, 4, 8, 32, 64}"
+#endif
+
+#endif /* CRC32C_DEFS_H_ */
diff --git a/crypto/gen_crc32ctable.c b/crypto/gen_crc32ctable.c
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..1715229
--- /dev/null
+++ b/crypto/gen_crc32ctable.c
@@ -0,0 +1,79 @@
+#include <stdio.h>
+#include "crc32c_defs.h"
+#include <inttypes.h>
+
+#define ENTRIES_PER_LINE 4
+
+#if CRC32C_BITS <= 8
+#define LE_TABLE_SIZE (1 << CRC32C_BITS)
+#else
+#define LE_TABLE_SIZE 256
+#endif
+
+static uint32_t crc32c_table[8][256];
+
+/**
+ * crc32c_init() - allocate and initialize LE table data
+ *
+ * crc is the crc of the byte i; other entries are filled in based on the
+ * fact that crctable[i^j] = crctable[i] ^ crctable[j].
+ *
+ */
+static void crc32c_init(void)
+{
+ unsigned i, j;
+ uint32_t crc = 1;
+
+ crc32c_table[0][0] = 0;
+
+ for (i = LE_TABLE_SIZE >> 1; i; i >>= 1) {
+ crc = (crc >> 1) ^ ((crc & 1) ? CRC32C_POLY_LE : 0);
+ for (j = 0; j < LE_TABLE_SIZE; j += 2 * i)
+ crc32c_table[0][i + j] = crc ^ crc32c_table[0][j];
+ }
+ for (i = 0; i < LE_TABLE_SIZE; i++) {
+ crc = crc32c_table[0][i];
+ for (j = 1; j < 8; j++) {
+ crc = crc32c_table[0][crc & 0xff] ^ (crc >> 8);
+ crc32c_table[j][i] = crc;
+ }
+ }
+}
+
+static void output_table(uint32_t table[8][256], int len, char trans)
+{
+ int i, j;
+
+ for (j = 0 ; j < 8; j++) {
+ printf("static const u32 t%d_%ce[] = {", j, trans);
+ for (i = 0; i < len - 1; i++) {
+ if ((i % ENTRIES_PER_LINE) == 0)
+ printf("\n");
+ printf("to%ce(0x%8.8xL),", trans, table[j][i]);
+ if ((i % ENTRIES_PER_LINE) != (ENTRIES_PER_LINE - 1))
+ printf(" ");
+ }
+ printf("to%ce(0x%8.8xL)};\n\n", trans, table[j][len - 1]);
+
+ if ((j+1)*8 >= CRC32C_BITS)
+ break;
+ }
+}
+
+int main(int argc, char **argv)
+{
+ printf("/*\n");
+ printf(" * crc32c_table.h - CRC32c tables\n");
+ printf(" * this file is generated - do not edit\n");
+ printf(" * # gen_crc32ctable > crc32c_table.h\n");
+ printf(" * with\n");
+ printf(" * CRC32C_BITS = %d\n", CRC32C_BITS);
+ printf(" */\n");
+
+ if (CRC32C_BITS > 1) {
+ crc32c_init();
+ output_table(crc32c_table, LE_TABLE_SIZE, 'l');
+ }
+
+ return 0;
+}


2011-09-30 16:12:44

by djwong

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: [PATCH v3] crc32c: Implement CRC32c with slicing-by-8 algorithm

[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 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).

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/.
>
> - 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).

> - 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.

--D

2011-10-01 13:52:00

by Joakim Tjernlund

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: [PATCH v3] crc32c: Implement CRC32c with slicing-by-8 algorithm

"Darrick J. Wong" <[email protected]> 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

2011-10-03 16:01:19

by djwong

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: [PATCH v3] crc32c: Implement CRC32c with slicing-by-8 algorithm

On Sat, Oct 01, 2011 at 03:52:00PM +0200, Joakim Tjernlund wrote:
> "Darrick J. Wong" <[email protected]> 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.

Yes, crc32* are not crypto hashes; crc32c is merely using the framework. I'm
not inclined to tear it out of there unless the crypto maintainers tell me to
move it, which seems unlikely since Herbert made the move in the first place
for reasons I noted in my other reply.

> > > - 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?

How much L1 cache? Or, if you'd rather not give away specifics, has the CPU
more than 8KB L1 cache? I'm willing to concede that with little cache the
added memory pressure could be painful.

As for the old x86 machines, please have a look at:
http://djwong.org/docs/ext4_metadata_checksums.html#Benchmarking

~15% faster on a 2GHz Via C7
~20% faster on a 2.7GHz P4
~25% faster on a 500MHz P3

I vaguely recall it was ~20% faster on a 400MHz P2, but all the kernel.org
wikis are still down. :(

So I suspect the key factor here is memory hierachy, since all of those systems
have at least 16K of L1 cache. Slice by 8 might actually suck on a Pentium
Proor earlier. Unfortunately I don't have anything older than a PII...

> 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.

It seems fine on a ppc64 running in 32bit mode too. I'll go find an old ppc32
and see how it fares. I think it's a G3 500MHz.

--D

2011-10-03 20:13:21

by Joakim Tjernlund

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: [PATCH v3] crc32c: Implement CRC32c with slicing-by-8 algorithm

"Darrick J. Wong" <[email protected]> wrote on 2011/10/03 18:00:36:
>
> On Sat, Oct 01, 2011 at 03:52:00PM +0200, Joakim Tjernlund wrote:
> > "Darrick J. Wong" <[email protected]> wrote on 2011/09/30 18:12:23:
> > >
> > > [putting mailing lists on cc]

[SNIP]

> > >
> > > <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?
>
> How much L1 cache? Or, if you'd rather not give away specifics, has the CPU
> more than 8KB L1 cache? I'm willing to concede that with little cache the
> added memory pressure could be painful.
>
> As for the old x86 machines, please have a look at:
> http://djwong.org/docs/ext4_metadata_checksums.html#Benchmarking
>
> ~15% faster on a 2GHz Via C7
> ~20% faster on a 2.7GHz P4
> ~25% faster on a 500MHz P3
>
> I vaguely recall it was ~20% faster on a 400MHz P2, but all the kernel.org
> wikis are still down. :(
>
> So I suspect the key factor here is memory hierachy, since all of those systems
> have at least 16K of L1 cache. Slice by 8 might actually suck on a Pentium
> Proor earlier. Unfortunately I don't have anything older than a PII...

It is 16KB cache on this CPU. I don't know why it was so much slower. Could be a
gcc thing as gcc does a fairly lame job at optimizing crc32. Still think making this
configurable is a good thing. At least until the verdict is in from other CPUs.

Jocke