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Commit Graph

3 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Simon Tatham
235f5bf8ae Check for auxv.h and hwcap.h before including them.
uClibc-ng does not provide <sys/auxv.h>, and a non-Linux-kernel-based
Unixlike system running on Arm will probably not provide
<asm/hwcap.h>. Now we check for both of those headers at autoconf
time, and if either one is absent, we don't do the runtime test for
Arm crypto acceleration.

This should only make a difference on systems where this module
previously failed to compile at all. But obviously it would be nicer
to find alternative ways to check for crypto acceleration on such
systems; patches welcome.
2019-03-26 19:19:28 +00:00
Simon Tatham
dc2fdb8acf Support hardware SHA-256 and SHA-1 on Arm platforms.
Similarly to my recent addition of NEON-accelerated AES, these new
implementations drop in alongside the SHA-NI ones, under a different
set of ifdefs. All the details of selection and detection are
essentially the same as they were for the AES code.
2019-01-23 22:36:17 +00:00
Simon Tatham
53747ad3ab Support hardware AES on Arm platforms.
The refactored sshaes.c gives me a convenient slot to drop in a second
hardware-accelerated AES implementation, similar to the existing one
but using Arm NEON intrinsics in place of the x86 AES-NI ones.

This needed a minor structural change, because Arm systems are often
heterogeneous, containing more than one type of CPU which won't
necessarily all support the same set of architecture features. So you
can't test at run time for the presence of AES acceleration by
querying the CPU you're running on - even if you found a way to do it,
the answer wouldn't be reliable once the OS started migrating your
process between CPUs. Instead, you have to ask the OS itself, because
only that knows about _all_ the CPUs on the system. So that means the
aes_hw_available() mechanism has to extend a tentacle into each
platform subdirectory.

The trickiest part was the nest of ifdefs that tries to detect whether
the compiler can support the necessary parts. I had successful
test-compiles on several compilers, and was able to run the code
directly on an AArch64 tablet (so I know it passes cryptsuite), but
it's likely that at least some Arm platforms won't be able to build it
because of some path through the ifdefs that I haven't been able to
test yet.
2019-01-16 22:08:50 +00:00