s390x-mont.pl
6.84 KB
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
#! /usr/bin/env perl
# Copyright 2007-2018 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved.
#
# Licensed under the OpenSSL license (the "License"). You may not use
# this file except in compliance with the License. You can obtain a copy
# in the file LICENSE in the source distribution or at
# https://www.openssl.org/source/license.html
# ====================================================================
# Written by Andy Polyakov <appro@openssl.org> for the OpenSSL
# project. The module is, however, dual licensed under OpenSSL and
# CRYPTOGAMS licenses depending on where you obtain it. For further
# details see http://www.openssl.org/~appro/cryptogams/.
# ====================================================================
# April 2007.
#
# Performance improvement over vanilla C code varies from 85% to 45%
# depending on key length and benchmark. Unfortunately in this context
# these are not very impressive results [for code that utilizes "wide"
# 64x64=128-bit multiplication, which is not commonly available to C
# programmers], at least hand-coded bn_asm.c replacement is known to
# provide 30-40% better results for longest keys. Well, on a second
# thought it's not very surprising, because z-CPUs are single-issue
# and _strictly_ in-order execution, while bn_mul_mont is more or less
# dependent on CPU ability to pipe-line instructions and have several
# of them "in-flight" at the same time. I mean while other methods,
# for example Karatsuba, aim to minimize amount of multiplications at
# the cost of other operations increase, bn_mul_mont aim to neatly
# "overlap" multiplications and the other operations [and on most
# platforms even minimize the amount of the other operations, in
# particular references to memory]. But it's possible to improve this
# module performance by implementing dedicated squaring code-path and
# possibly by unrolling loops...
# January 2009.
#
# Reschedule to minimize/avoid Address Generation Interlock hazard,
# make inner loops counter-based.
# November 2010.
#
# Adapt for -m31 build. If kernel supports what's called "highgprs"
# feature on Linux [see /proc/cpuinfo], it's possible to use 64-bit
# instructions and achieve "64-bit" performance even in 31-bit legacy
# application context. The feature is not specific to any particular
# processor, as long as it's "z-CPU". Latter implies that the code
# remains z/Architecture specific. Compatibility with 32-bit BN_ULONG
# is achieved by swapping words after 64-bit loads, follow _dswap-s.
# On z990 it was measured to perform 2.6-2.2 times better than
# compiler-generated code, less for longer keys...
$flavour = shift;
if ($flavour =~ /3[12]/) {
$SIZE_T=4;
$g="";
} else {
$SIZE_T=8;
$g="g";
}
while (($output=shift) && ($output!~/\w[\w\-]*\.\w+$/)) {}
open STDOUT,">$output";
$stdframe=16*$SIZE_T+4*8;
$mn0="%r0";
$num="%r1";
# int bn_mul_mont(
$rp="%r2"; # BN_ULONG *rp,
$ap="%r3"; # const BN_ULONG *ap,
$bp="%r4"; # const BN_ULONG *bp,
$np="%r5"; # const BN_ULONG *np,
$n0="%r6"; # const BN_ULONG *n0,
#$num="160(%r15)" # int num);
$bi="%r2"; # zaps rp
$j="%r7";
$ahi="%r8";
$alo="%r9";
$nhi="%r10";
$nlo="%r11";
$AHI="%r12";
$NHI="%r13";
$count="%r14";
$sp="%r15";
$code.=<<___;
.text
.globl bn_mul_mont
.type bn_mul_mont,\@function
bn_mul_mont:
lgf $num,`$stdframe+$SIZE_T-4`($sp) # pull $num
sla $num,`log($SIZE_T)/log(2)` # $num to enumerate bytes
la $bp,0($num,$bp)
st${g} %r2,2*$SIZE_T($sp)
cghi $num,16 #
lghi %r2,0 #
blr %r14 # if($num<16) return 0;
___
$code.=<<___ if ($flavour =~ /3[12]/);
tmll $num,4
bnzr %r14 # if ($num&1) return 0;
___
$code.=<<___ if ($flavour !~ /3[12]/);
cghi $num,96 #
bhr %r14 # if($num>96) return 0;
___
$code.=<<___;
stm${g} %r3,%r15,3*$SIZE_T($sp)
lghi $rp,-$stdframe-8 # leave room for carry bit
lcgr $j,$num # -$num
lgr %r0,$sp
la $rp,0($rp,$sp)
la $sp,0($j,$rp) # alloca
st${g} %r0,0($sp) # back chain
sra $num,3 # restore $num
la $bp,0($j,$bp) # restore $bp
ahi $num,-1 # adjust $num for inner loop
lg $n0,0($n0) # pull n0
_dswap $n0
lg $bi,0($bp)
_dswap $bi
lg $alo,0($ap)
_dswap $alo
mlgr $ahi,$bi # ap[0]*bp[0]
lgr $AHI,$ahi
lgr $mn0,$alo # "tp[0]"*n0
msgr $mn0,$n0
lg $nlo,0($np) #
_dswap $nlo
mlgr $nhi,$mn0 # np[0]*m1
algr $nlo,$alo # +="tp[0]"
lghi $NHI,0
alcgr $NHI,$nhi
la $j,8(%r0) # j=1
lr $count,$num
.align 16
.L1st:
lg $alo,0($j,$ap)
_dswap $alo
mlgr $ahi,$bi # ap[j]*bp[0]
algr $alo,$AHI
lghi $AHI,0
alcgr $AHI,$ahi
lg $nlo,0($j,$np)
_dswap $nlo
mlgr $nhi,$mn0 # np[j]*m1
algr $nlo,$NHI
lghi $NHI,0
alcgr $nhi,$NHI # +="tp[j]"
algr $nlo,$alo
alcgr $NHI,$nhi
stg $nlo,$stdframe-8($j,$sp) # tp[j-1]=
la $j,8($j) # j++
brct $count,.L1st
algr $NHI,$AHI
lghi $AHI,0
alcgr $AHI,$AHI # upmost overflow bit
stg $NHI,$stdframe-8($j,$sp)
stg $AHI,$stdframe($j,$sp)
la $bp,8($bp) # bp++
.Louter:
lg $bi,0($bp) # bp[i]
_dswap $bi
lg $alo,0($ap)
_dswap $alo
mlgr $ahi,$bi # ap[0]*bp[i]
alg $alo,$stdframe($sp) # +=tp[0]
lghi $AHI,0
alcgr $AHI,$ahi
lgr $mn0,$alo
msgr $mn0,$n0 # tp[0]*n0
lg $nlo,0($np) # np[0]
_dswap $nlo
mlgr $nhi,$mn0 # np[0]*m1
algr $nlo,$alo # +="tp[0]"
lghi $NHI,0
alcgr $NHI,$nhi
la $j,8(%r0) # j=1
lr $count,$num
.align 16
.Linner:
lg $alo,0($j,$ap)
_dswap $alo
mlgr $ahi,$bi # ap[j]*bp[i]
algr $alo,$AHI
lghi $AHI,0
alcgr $ahi,$AHI
alg $alo,$stdframe($j,$sp)# +=tp[j]
alcgr $AHI,$ahi
lg $nlo,0($j,$np)
_dswap $nlo
mlgr $nhi,$mn0 # np[j]*m1
algr $nlo,$NHI
lghi $NHI,0
alcgr $nhi,$NHI
algr $nlo,$alo # +="tp[j]"
alcgr $NHI,$nhi
stg $nlo,$stdframe-8($j,$sp) # tp[j-1]=
la $j,8($j) # j++
brct $count,.Linner
algr $NHI,$AHI
lghi $AHI,0
alcgr $AHI,$AHI
alg $NHI,$stdframe($j,$sp)# accumulate previous upmost overflow bit
lghi $ahi,0
alcgr $AHI,$ahi # new upmost overflow bit
stg $NHI,$stdframe-8($j,$sp)
stg $AHI,$stdframe($j,$sp)
la $bp,8($bp) # bp++
cl${g} $bp,`$stdframe+8+4*$SIZE_T`($j,$sp) # compare to &bp[num]
jne .Louter
l${g} $rp,`$stdframe+8+2*$SIZE_T`($j,$sp) # reincarnate rp
la $ap,$stdframe($sp)
ahi $num,1 # restore $num, incidentally clears "borrow"
la $j,0(%r0)
lr $count,$num
.Lsub: lg $alo,0($j,$ap)
lg $nlo,0($j,$np)
_dswap $nlo
slbgr $alo,$nlo
stg $alo,0($j,$rp)
la $j,8($j)
brct $count,.Lsub
lghi $ahi,0
slbgr $AHI,$ahi # handle upmost carry
lghi $NHI,-1
xgr $NHI,$AHI
la $j,0(%r0)
lgr $count,$num
.Lcopy: lg $ahi,$stdframe($j,$sp) # conditional copy
lg $alo,0($j,$rp)
ngr $ahi,$AHI
ngr $alo,$NHI
ogr $alo,$ahi
_dswap $alo
stg $j,$stdframe($j,$sp) # zap tp
stg $alo,0($j,$rp)
la $j,8($j)
brct $count,.Lcopy
la %r1,`$stdframe+8+6*$SIZE_T`($j,$sp)
lm${g} %r6,%r15,0(%r1)
lghi %r2,1 # signal "processed"
br %r14
.size bn_mul_mont,.-bn_mul_mont
.string "Montgomery Multiplication for s390x, CRYPTOGAMS by <appro\@openssl.org>"
___
foreach (split("\n",$code)) {
s/\`([^\`]*)\`/eval $1/ge;
s/_dswap\s+(%r[0-9]+)/sprintf("rllg\t%s,%s,32",$1,$1) if($SIZE_T==4)/e;
print $_,"\n";
}
close STDOUT;