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author | Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> | 2009-08-10 16:52:07 -0700 |
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committer | Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com> | 2009-08-10 17:26:51 -0700 |
commit | 926172c5e4808726244713ef70398cd38b055f1e (patch) | |
tree | 882344c9a83dd2f43129a2c4ba1d277edd8e5fe1 /block-sha1 | |
parent | 66c9c6c0fbba0894ebce3da572f62eb05162e547 (diff) | |
download | git-926172c5e4808726244713ef70398cd38b055f1e.tar.gz git-926172c5e4808726244713ef70398cd38b055f1e.tar.xz |
block-sha1: improve code on large-register-set machines
For x86 performance (especially in 32-bit mode) I added that hack to write
the SHA1 internal temporary hash using a volatile pointer, in order to get
gcc to not try to cache the array contents. Because gcc will do all the
wrong things, and then spill things in insane random ways.
But on architectures like PPC, where you have 32 registers, it's actually
perfectly reasonable to put the whole temporary array[] into the register
set, and gcc can do so.
So make the 'volatile unsigned int *' cast be dependent on a
SMALL_REGISTER_SET preprocessor symbol, and enable it (currently) on just
x86 and x86-64. With that, the routine is fairly reasonable even when
compared to the hand-scheduled PPC version. Ben Herrenschmidt reports on
a G5:
* Paulus asm version: about 3.67s
* Yours with no change: about 5.74s
* Yours without "volatile": about 3.78s
so with this the C version is within about 3% of the asm one.
And add a lot of commentary on what the heck is going on.
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'block-sha1')
-rw-r--r-- | block-sha1/sha1.c | 25 |
1 files changed, 24 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/block-sha1/sha1.c b/block-sha1/sha1.c index 886bcf25e..304cd0452 100644 --- a/block-sha1/sha1.c +++ b/block-sha1/sha1.c @@ -82,6 +82,7 @@ void blk_SHA1_Final(unsigned char hashout[20], blk_SHA_CTX *ctx) #define SHA_ASM(op, x, n) ({ unsigned int __res; __asm__(op " %1,%0":"=r" (__res):"i" (n), "0" (x)); __res; }) #define SHA_ROL(x,n) SHA_ASM("rol", x, n) #define SHA_ROR(x,n) SHA_ASM("ror", x, n) +#define SMALL_REGISTER_SET #else @@ -93,7 +94,29 @@ void blk_SHA1_Final(unsigned char hashout[20], blk_SHA_CTX *ctx) /* This "rolls" over the 512-bit array */ #define W(x) (array[(x)&15]) -#define setW(x, val) (*(volatile unsigned int *)&W(x) = (val)) + +/* + * If you have 32 registers or more, the compiler can (and should) + * try to change the array[] accesses into registers. However, on + * machines with less than ~25 registers, that won't really work, + * and at least gcc will make an unholy mess of it. + * + * So to avoid that mess which just slows things down, we force + * the stores to memory to actually happen (we might be better off + * with a 'W(t)=(val);asm("":"+m" (W(t))' there instead, as + * suggested by Artur Skawina - that will also make gcc unable to + * try to do the silly "optimize away loads" part because it won't + * see what the value will be). + * + * Ben Herrenschmidt reports that on PPC, the C version comes close + * to the optimized asm with this (ie on PPC you don't want that + * 'volatile', since there are lots of registers). + */ +#ifdef SMALL_REGISTER_SET + #define setW(x, val) (*(volatile unsigned int *)&W(x) = (val)) +#else + #define setW(x, val) (W(x) = (val)) +#endif /* * Where do we get the source from? The first 16 iterations get it from |