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authorLibravatar brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>2022-03-10 17:47:50 +0000
committerLibravatar Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>2022-03-10 11:18:05 -0800
commit544d93bc3b459f6e40526acdcf36a14c3d5dfec6 (patch)
treecc44fc9379605992162223f1d91ac89b936668d8 /walker.h
parentGit 2.35.1 (diff)
downloadtgif-544d93bc3b459f6e40526acdcf36a14c3d5dfec6.tar.xz
block-sha1: remove use of obsolete x86 assembly
In the block SHA-1 code, we have special assembly code for i386 and amd64 to perform rotations with assembly. This is supposed to help pick the correct rotation operation depending on which rotation is smaller, which can help some systems perform slightly better, since any circular rotation can be specified as either a rotate left or a rotate right. However, this isn't needed, so we should remove it. First, SHA-1, like SHA-2, uses fixed constant rotates. Thus, all rotation amounts are known at compile time and are in fact baked into the code. Fortunately, peephole optimizers recognize rotations specified in the normal way and automatically emit the correct code, including a preference for choosing a rotate left versus a rotate right. This has been the case for well over a decade, and is a standard example of the utility of a peephole optimizer. Moreover, all modern CPUs, with the exception of extremely limited embedded CPUs such as some Cortex-M processors, provide a barrel shifter, which lets the CPU perform rotates of any bit amount in constant time. This is valuable for many cryptographic algorithms to improve performance, and is required to prevent timing attacks in algorithms which use data-dependent rotations (which don't include the hash algorithms we use). As a result, even though the compiler does the correct optimization, it isn't even needed here and either a left or a right rotate is equally acceptable. In fact, the SHA-256 code already takes this into account and just writes the simple code using an inline function to let the compiler optimize it for us. The downside of using this code, however, is that it uses a GCC extension, which makes the compiler complain when using -pedantic unless it's prefixed with __extension__. We could fix that, but since it's not needed, let's just remove it. We haven't noticed this because almost everyone uses the SHA1DC code instead, but it still shows up for some people. Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
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